ă N I C C A ă 23, she/her â choso's sweetheart, levi's wife, aspiring writer, professional yapper, does not use tumblr to procrastinate, reads 24/7 . . .
â contents of this blog:
⯠mostly jjk-centric
⯠but aot is my special interest
⯠definitely nsfw - mdni.á
permanent taglist
Classification: Special Grade Hazard (Satoru Gojo x Reader x Suguru Geto )
How (NOT) to Ask Someone Out (Satoru Gojo x Reader )
âThis relationship isnât exactly rainbows and sunshine, you know.â ( Ryomen Sukuna x Reader )
If Sukuna were asked how he would describe his oh-so-lovely girlfriend, heâd say you were difficult to deal withâstubborn, mouthy, irritating. A pain in his ass.
The funny thing was that if someone asked you the same question about him, your answer would be nearly identical. In fact, more than once, when Sukuna had lazily mentioned he couldnât believe it had taken him almost two months to get you to agree to a date, youâd look him dead in the eye and say:
âThis relationship isnât exactly rainbows and sunshine, you know. Neither are you.â
He would only snort and roll his eyes at that.
Still, there were things Sukuna liked about youâthings heâd never admit out loud.
Like the fact that you didnât take shit from anyone. Not coworkers, not strangers, and certainly not him. You didnât bend yourself into something more agreeable, didnât soften your opinions to spare feelings, didnât smile when you were angry or pretend to agree when you didnât.
However, the first thing heâd noticed about youâbefore youâd even properly spokenâwas your ass. The curve of it in a pair of jeans that looked like theyâd been designed by God himself, and the immediate, unhelpful thought that followed: how good youâd look bent over. Honestly, that alone was probably what made him approach you in the first place.
The second thing he learned, shortly after your brief introduction (which, in hindsight, barely counted as one), was that if something annoyed you, everyone knew about it. Most people learned that after one conversation and so did he, when you refused to entertain him for longer than three minutes.
A few months into the relationshipâone heâd worked harder for than anything else in his lifeâSukuna learned your warnings werenât empty threats. When you said âdonât push me,â whether literally or metaphorically, you meant it. Unlike most people, you werenât afraid of crossing lines.
You were perfectly willing to start a war over principle.
The first time he really understood that started with something stupid; something so small that absolutely should not have turned into a four-day argument.
At the time, youâd only been living together for about two weeks. The apartment still felt newâunpacked boxes shoved into corners, your books stacked on the floor because neither of you (mainly Sukuna, who had claimed the task) had bothered assembling the shelves. Half your clothes hung over chairs because putting them away required effort neither of you could be bothered to summon.
The day before, Sukuna had spent nearly twenty minutes talking about mochi.
Twenty. Entire. Minutes.
You hadnât known a person could talk about mochi for that long. Apparently, they could, especially if that person was Sukuna.
âIt was different,â heâd insisted, leaning against the kitchen counter.
âDifferent how?â you asked.
âIt just was.â
âVery descriptive,â you said dryly.
His eye twitched, but he kept going anyway. âThe texture was perfect.â
âFascinating,â you said, mock-gasping.
You were enjoying this far too much: for someone who claimed not to like sweets, Sukuna seemed oddly passionate about this specific dessert. That thought slipped out before you could stop it.
âYou know, I didnât realize you cared this much about mochi.â
His expression darkened immediately. âI donât.â
âYouâve been talking about it for twenty minutes.â
You only grinned when the silence followed. Five full minutes of it because Sukuna knew that if he kept talking, heâd only prove your point.
Naturally, you couldnât leave it alone.
âSo they probably werenât even that good.â
The reaction was instant. âWhat?â
You fought back a laugh. âI mean, theyâre just mochi.â
âThey were not just mochi.â
âOh?â You smiled, victorious.
Sukuna narrowed his eyes, realizing you were doing this on purpose. You burst out laughing. His expression went flat.
He pushed off the counter, walked over, pressed a firm kiss to your temple, and mumbled a dry, âGoodnight,â before disappearing into the bedroom.
The next day, you decided to do something nice. Partly because you loved him. Partly because annoying him only worked when balanced with the occasional act of peace.
So you decided to make the famous mochi.
How hard could it be? The answer turned out to be: very. The dough stuck to everything. You nearly threw the entire batch into the trash twice. But somehow, after hours of trial and error, you managed to make it anyway.
By the time evening arrived, you had a container of mochi sitting proudly on the kitchen counter.
âFinally!â you beamed when Sukuna walked through the front door.
His gym bag hung from one shoulder, sweatpants riding low on his hips. A black compression shirt clung to his chest and arms, darkened with sweat from training. His pink hair was a mess, sticking out in different directions like heâd run a hand through it a dozen times on the way home.
The second he saw you, you practically bounced to your feet. Sukuna shot you a tired look.
âMiss me that much?â
âDonât flatter yourself.â The smile on your face completely ruined the insult.
He snorted and headed straight for the bedroom.
You rushed into the kitchen first, then followed him, slipping into the bathroom without thinkingâwhere he was already halfway through pulling his shirt over his head. The sight caught you off guard. For a second, you just stood there, staring at the hard lines of his stomach before remembering why you were there in the first place.
âLook, âKuna.â You held out the container, excitement practically vibrating in your voice.
Sukuna glanced over his shoulder and then turned back to the sink.
Your smile falteredâjust slightly. You waited.
Nothing.
No smirk. No teasing comment. Not even a proper look. Just a quiet grunt.
ââŚWell?â
âWhat?â
âWhat do you mean, âwhatâ?â You frowned. âThe mochi.â
His eyes flicked to the container. âLooks fine.â
Just fine? Youâd spent the entire day wrestling with sticky rice dough and nearly losing your sanity to powdered starch, and all he had to say was looks fine?
The excitement in your chest dimmed. Still, you swallowed the frustration down. Maybe he was exhausted, maybe training had been rough. Maybe he just needed five minutes to turn back into your annoyingly difficult but perfect boyfriend that loved you very much and liked paying attention to you.
âTry one after your shower.â
âMm.â
You forced yourself not to roll your eyesâyou hated how his communication sometimes reduced to random sounds, grunts, and half-finished sighs.
âItâs the same kind you wouldnât shut up about.â
That finally got his attention. For a moment, it looked like he might actually try one right there and then. However, instead he frowned, eyebrows knitting together.
âTsk. Canât eat those. Cutting calories.â
Something in your chest snapped. You didnât argueâdidnât raise your voice. You didnât even give him the satisfaction of reacting. Youâd already given him a chance to fix it. He didnât.
So you stayed quiet.
He, on the other hand, decided you were done talking and stepped into the shower like nothing had happened.
Five minutes later, the mochiâand the entire container you hadnât bothered taking them out ofâhit the bottom of the trash with a dull thud.
You didnât speak to him for four days afterward.
The second time Sukuna realized just how far you were willing to go when someone pushed your buttons came about a month later. By then, heâd already learned a few things about you. He knew that when you got quiet, he should probably start apologizing. He knew that when you crossed your arms and tilted your head, he was seconds away from hearing an opinion he wasnât going to enjoy.
The problem was that Sukuna rarely listened when people told him what to do. Especially when annoying them was significantly more entertaining.
It started innocently enough. You were making dinner. Sukuna was being useless, which, in fairness, wasnât unusual.
You stood at the counter, chopping vegetables, while he leaned against the kitchen island, arms crossed over his chest, offering absolutely no assistance whatsoever.
âYouâre cutting those uneven.â
âThat oneâs bigger than the others.â
âYou should learn how to hold the knife better.â
You sighed, though it was clear you werenât really mad. âAre you going to help, or are you going to stand there and criticize my cutting skills?â
âThe second one.â
At first, the banter was pleasant. Easy. The kind of conversation that came from spending enough time around someone that silence never felt awkward. Then Sukuna spotted the bowl of freshly cut cucumber slices, and unfortunately for you, Sukuna possessed the emotional maturity of an overgrown child when he was bored.
A hand darted out. One slice disappeared.
Crunch.
You glanced over. He stared back innocently.
You narrowed your eyes, âDonât.â
âWhat?â
âYou know what.â
Another stolen slice, another crunch.
You pointed the knife at him. âQuit stealing.â
âNo.â Sukuna smirked.
You exhaled slowly. Fine, whatever. You went back to chopping.
Thirty seconds laterâcrunch.
You turned your head to the side. Another cucumber slice was gone. You then moved your gaze to your boyfriend, who dared to grin at you like heâd done nothing wrong, like you hadnât told him to stop already, several times.
You werenât talking to him anymore, which shouldâve been his first warning to quit. Instead, the smug bastard reached straight for the cutting board.
He only got away with it once more.
The next time his hand moved in, your head snapped toward him and the knife came down.
THUNK.
The blade embedded itself into the cutting board exactly where his fingertips had been less than a second earlier. He jerked his hand back instantly.
His red eyes flicked from the knife to his hand, then back to the knife. Slowly, then to you. He looked like he couldnât believe youâd actually done it.
ââŚAre you insane?!â
You shrugged, âTold you to quit it.â
A lesser man wouldnât have put up with youânot your temper, not your stubbornness, and certainly not your increasingly questionable methods of proving a point. Fortunatelyâor unfortunatelyâSukuna wasnât exactly normal either. If anything, he was just as bad. Maybe worse.
Like the time you gave him the silent treatment over something he considered completely insignificant. You considered it principle. He considered it stupid. The argument lasted all of ten minutes. Yet the aftermath lasted three days.
Normally, Sukuna wouldâve waited you out. You were stubborn, but so was he. This time, though, he decided he was tired of being ignored. That shouldâve worried you because whenever Sukuna got tired of something, he tended to fix it in the most ridiculous way possible.
It was late when he picked you up from a girlsâ night out. You were still annoyed. Still refusing to speak to him. That didnât stop you from getting into the car, though. After all, what else was a boyfriend you were actively ignoring supposed to be good for?
The first five minutes passed in silence.
The low hum of the engine filled the car. Streetlights flickered across the windows.
Sukuna drummed his fingers against the steering wheel. âStill mad?â
Not a word from you.
âThatâs cute.â
You kept your gaze fixed out the window when he spoke again.
âYouâre dragging this out.â
A quiet scoff was all he got in return.
He clicked his tongue. âBrat.â
Finally, you turned your head. Your eyes met his, sharp and unyielding. You held his gaze just long enough to make your point perfectly clearâyou werenât talking to him until he apologized properly. Then you looked away again.
The next time your eyes met, he didnât look away.
The car kept moving. His hands stayed on the wheel. His foot remained on the gas. His eyes stayed entirely on you.
âIâm not looking away until you say something.â
Your gaze flicked briefly toward the windshield. The road ahead stretched dark and empty under scattered streetlights. Not another car in sight, but there was no way he was actually doing this.
He wasnât that crazy. Right?
He had to be messing with you. Trying to provoke a reaction. Break your silence. You refused to give him the satisfaction. Instead, you shrugged and looked back at him, silently daring him to follow through.
Sukunaâs stare didnât waver, not even slightly. The bastard looked genuinely unhinged at this pointâyou werenât even sure he was blinking.
Ten seconds passed.
Your lips pressed together harder.
A muscle ticked in his jaw.
His foot pressed a little further down on the gas.
The engine hummed louder.
Out of the corner of your eye, you saw his knuckles tighten around the steering wheel, keeping the car perfectly straight despite his complete refusal to look away.
You knew he knew this road. He drove it practically every day. You also knew heâd have to look away eventually. Nobody was stupid enough to keep this up forever. Then againâthis was Sukuna. Stupidity fueled by spite was practically his specialty.
You werenât scared in the slightest. The alcohol still buzzing pleasantly in your system dulled anything resembling self-preservation. But your heartbeat picked up anyway. However, not from fear. But from that sharp, familiar spark that always appeared when the two of you refused to yield. When neither of you was willing to lose. When common sense quietly left the room and stubbornness took over.
It was ridiculous.
Childish.
Dangerous.
Your legs pressed together almost unconsciously, and you shiftedâsubtly at first, then more deliberately. Sukuna noticed immediately when you started rubbing your thighs. His gaze dipped before it snapped back to your face, his mouth curling into a slow, infuriating grinâcanines just barely showing.
He knew. Knew you were seconds away from breaking, whether that meant saying something first or doing something else entirely.
The tension in the car snapped like a wire pulled too tight. You couldnât take it anymore. The air in the car felt thick, pressing against your skin, sticking your clothes to you in a way that suddenly felt unbearable, making you want to rip them off.
âPull over,â you said. âNow.â
Sukuna didnât need to be told twice.
The car jerked off the road, tires crunching over gravel as he brought it to a stop beneath a dim streetlight. The engine stayed running.
Neither of you moved. Just looked at each other. His smirk widenedâbarely contained, almost dangerous in how entertained he looked.
That was it.
You moved first.
Unbuckling your seatbelt in one sharp motion, you climbed over the center console and settled into his lap. His hands came to your waist immediately, like heâd been waiting for you to do exactly that; a low exhale left him, more amused than anything, as if youâd just confirmed every assumption he had about you.
Your skirt rode up as you shifted, straddling his thighs properly now, and Sukunaâs hands slid down without hesitation. Palms dragging along your bare legs before returning up, fingers digging into the soft flesh of your ass, tightening there like he was anchoring you in place.
You grabbed the back of his hair and pulled just enough to tilt his head toward you.
He didnât resist.
The kiss came fastâimpatient, heated, all lingering frustration and unresolved argument. When you pulled back slightly, you were still close enough to feel his warm breath against your mouth.
âYou still owe me an apology,â you murmured.
Sukuna huffed a quiet laugh.
Your lips traveled down the side of his neck, teeth lightly sinking into the spot just above his collarbone that you knew made him squirm. You felt itâ the slight shift in his grip. The way his fingers flexed like he was deciding whether to pull you closer or hold you still.
âOh, donât worry, brat,â he said, voice low as you moved your hips, grinding yourself against the tight stretch of his jeans. âYouâll get it.â
Your relationship with Sukuna was a constant push and pull.
Bad decisions layered over worse ones, like neither of you had ever learned what consequences were or maybe you just didnât care enough to stop, because deep down there wasnât much, if anything, that could make either of you walk away. You were head over heels for him, and he wasnât much betterâa man obsessed, because heâd found someone who could actually keep up with him.
It wasnât healthy. Not even close. Any reasonable person wouldâve packed their bags and disappeared a long time ago from a relationship like this. But nothing about the two of you had ever been reasonable or normal.
Somehow, every messed-up moment only seemed to pull you tighter together, like something neither of you could outrun even if you tried. Even when your plansâor hisâbackfired.
Like the time you got annoyed that he kept using your expensive hair products, so you replaced them with black dye. And when he realized youâd basically dyed his hair without permission? He didnât get mad, didnât even look annoyed. If anything, he looked pleased.
He ran a hand through his now black hair, checked himself in the mirror, then glanced at you with that same sharp, knowing look. He didnât need to call you out. You both already knew you were responsible for this.
âLooks good.â
And, admittedly, it did. He looked good, but you missed the pink. Badly enough that you even offered to book him a salon appointment to fix it after a week of getting jumpscared every time he walked through the front door.
You still hadnât fully adjusted to black hair being attached to your boyfriend.
He didnât take you up on your salon suggestion. Instead, the moment his pink roots started growing in, he just buzzed it all off.
When you saw him come home that night, you were genuinely shocked. You werenât the type to dictate how your boyfriend should look, but stillâyou told him that if he shaved his hair off again, youâd shave your eyebrows.
It was meant to sound like a threat. You were pretty sure you wouldnât look great without them.
Sukuna looked at you for a second, then said youâd look âbatshit insane.â
OR gojo wants to ask you out but does it in the worst way possible
⯠masterlist
⯠pairing: gojo/reader
⯠content: gojo is an idiot, fluff & angst, gojo and reader know each other, ft. other characters. . .
⯠a/n: since Iâm moving all my works from my old blog, I might as well post the ones that have been sitting in drafts until now. enjoy!
CHAPTER ONE.
It was not often that Gojo Satoru had time to be bored.
Japan, unfortunately for him, was a thriving breeding ground for the very problems he was tasked with eradicatingâlike a wound that never quite closed, always reopening in new and unpleasant ways.
Autumn was the worst of season with the most work. The air turned damp and heavy, saturated with a quiet that clung to skin and seeped into bone. Curses bloomed like mould in forgotten corners, thriving where sunlight refused to linger.
The higher-ups issued assignments without pause, stacking them like cursed talismans on an altar that never stopped growing, never granting him even a moment to simply breathe. Meetings he was forced to attend dragged on interminably, though Satoru usually contributed nothing more than long legs stretched lazily across the table, a tilt of his head, theatrical sighs, and ill-timed commentary that earned him synchronized glares from every direction. . .
Gojo Satoru was constantly movingâwhether from one mission to the next, or simply pacing from one side of a room to the other because stillness felt like a cage he refused to sit inside. He was everywhere he was needed, and nowhere he was wanted at the same time.
And yet, sometimes, between all of itâbetween exorcisms that left invisible stains of cursed energy, between paperwork he absolutely did not read and reports he absolutely did not writeâsilence settled.
Not the peaceful kind. Never the peaceful kind. It was a dangerous silence, the sort that did not soothe but sharpened. Because when Satoru was bored, his mind did not rest. It wandered. It prowled. It found loose threads and pulled until something unraveled.
Boredom, however fleeting, was always the birthplace of his worst ideasâthe kind that arrived dressed as brilliance, glittering and certain, only to detonate spectacularly the moment he chose to act on them.
Ever since Itadori Yuji had stuffed one of Sukunaâs shrivelled fingers down his throat as though it were an expired protein bar rather than an ancient cursed relic, and subsequently enrolled at Jujutsu High, Satoru had been stretched thin in ways even he could not entirely ignoreâthough he would have insisted otherwise if asked.
He was constantly searching for the remaining fingers of Ryomen Sukunaâthose ugly little relics of something that should have stayed dead and forgottenâso they could eventually be served to Yuji as his final âmealâ before execution. Or rather, he pretended to search for them with the kind of theatrical diligence the higher-ups adored. They loved the illusion of effort.
And Gojo Satoru was nothing if not a performer.
Between that grand performance and the reports he never bothered to write after missions, he was regularly dispatched to exorcise Grade 1 and Special Grade curses, as though he were some divine exterminator on call. A god with a schedule. A weapon with appointment slots.
More than once, he considered not goingânot out of fear, never thatâbut because the routine was beginning to feel like chewing the same flavorless candy until even the memory of sweetness had vanished.
It was not as though the higher-ups could truly punish him. What were they going to doâfire him? Execute him? The thought almost made him laugh out loud.
Sometimes, he entertained the idea of skipping missions purely to see how creative their threats might become. Or better yet, how desperately inventive they would grow when forced to reel him back in.
But he always went.
Because if he did notâif he refused the heavier assignments, the more dangerous onesâthen they would simply be redirected elsewhere. Students like Megumi or Yuji would be sent in his place. It was no secret that, due to the chronic shortage of sorcerers, assignments were often mismatched in difficulty.
While Satoru was fond of his hands-on philosophyâthrowing students into the fire and trusting they would learn not to burnâhe was not heartless. His students were brilliant. They had him as a teacher, after all. But even brilliance could choke on something too large to swallow.
So he accepted every mission without much protest.
And it was after one of those last-minute âurgentâ assignments in the cityâwhere a curse tore through an abandoned bar like rot through woodâthat Gojo Satoru encountered someone he had never expected to see again.
â§ â§ â§
The curse died the way all of them did when Satoru decided he was finished with it. One moment it was thereâthis swollen, half-aware mass of rotting limbs and stitched-together mouthsâand the next, it simply wasnât.
Satoru stepped out of the abandoned bar, hands buried in his pockets, posture loose enough to suggest he had just finished a casual errand rather than erasing something born from human despair.
Fresh air replaced the stench of rot.
The city carried on as if nothing had happened. Cars murmured in the distance. A vending machine clunked somewhere down the block. A drunk laughed too loudly outside a convenience store with a dying neon sign. Ordinary sounds, stitched together into an ordinary world that had no idea how close it had just come to being altered.
Satoru glanced around. He recognized this place. Too well, in fact. Megumi and Tsumiki used to live nearby. A lifetime ago, though it had not been nearly that long.
He checked the time. One hour before he was supposed to meet Megumi and Yuji to pick up their new classmate. Plenty of time.
Nostalgia tugged at him. Boredom followed immediately after. Before he could properly dismiss either, his feet moved on their own, not toward the station or back to the school, butt down streets he had not walked in years.
The city grew quieter here. Laundry swayed from balconies. Somewhere nearby, dinner simmeredâgarlic and oil drifting through open windows. Cicadas hummed lazily.
And then when he turned the corner, he saw you, sitting on what barely qualified as a balcony, more narrow ledge than anything else. The railing pressed lightly against your shoulder, chipped paint flaking under your sleeve. One leg tucked beneath you, the other angled loosely, a cup of tea balanced in your hand. Steam rose in fragile spirals, dissolving into the afternoon light.
Your other hand held your phone.
Your brows were drawn together. Your lip was caught between your teeth. Your eyes narrowed at the screen.
Sunlight spilled over you, softening everything it touched. For a moment, Satoru felt like he had wandered into a romance film that was trying a little too hard. All that was missing was slow piano music and a dramatic gust of wind that existed purely for symbolism.
You looked different. Older. Still beautiful, though.
You did not notice him, which was not surprising.
He stood at the far edge of the sidewalk, hands in his pockets, black blindfold stark against white hair, watching. Even if you glanced in his direction, he doubted you would have made him out clearly.
Satoru wondered, absently, whether face-to-face would change anything, whether you would remember him at all. He would not have called you a friend. Acquaintance, maybe. Even that felt stretched thin because he could easily count the conversations he had with you on one hand and still have fingers left over.
The first time he heard your name, it had come from Tsumiki. It had meant nothing then. Just noise in a life already crowded with obligations. A passing mention in a warm kitchen that smelled faintly of something baked.
âSheâs really nice,â Tsumiki had said, as if that explained everything worth knowing.
You helped carry groceries upstairs when her bags were too heavy. You came back the next day with cookies.
After that first interaction, your presence had started to accumulate quietly around them. Not dramatic, just persistent, like warmth that refused to leave a room once it had entered.
You always appeared at Tsumiki and Megumi's door without warning. Said you had cooked too much breakfast. Or ordered too much food. Or simply did not like waste. Excuses that never sounded rehearsed. You knocked just to say hello sometimes. Asked if they were alright. If they needed anything. If they had eaten.
And more than once, Tsumiki had told Satoruâwith quiet fondnessâyou offered to stop by a shop on your way home, just in case they needed groceries.
Satoru had only seen you a handful of times back then. The first had been a Saturday morning when he stayed over.
Sunlight had spilled across the apartment floor in lazy stripes. He, Tsumiki, and Megumi had been sitting in the living room when the knock came.
Tsumiki had lit up immediately.
âShe always brings something she baked on Saturdays!â
Even Megumi had straightened, betraying the smallest flicker of anticipation he would never admit to.
Satoru, self-appointed responsible adult in the room, had gotten up first. Not because he needed to, but because curiosity had a way of pulling him forward before caution could catch up.
He had opened the door and there you were. Warm plate of cinnamon rolls balanced carefully in your hands. The glaze gleamed. Steam curled upward, carrying butter and spice.
For a full thirty seconds, Satoru had stared at the plate instead of youâhis fingers had actually twitched, itching to snatch one of the rolls, but instead he forced himself to raise his gaze.
His first thought was that you were younger than expected you to be. His second was that you were exactly his type. His third thought never got the chance to fully form because the situation immediately started collapsing under its own awkward gravity.
From your perspective, a stranger had opened the door to the apartment where two children you cared about lived. Tsumiki had mentioned a guardian, but you had imagined someone older. Not a young man with snow-white hair, an unreadable grin, and eyes like they had stolen color from the sky itself.
You had frozen, trying, rapidly, to determine whether he was family, or safe, or neither. There was no resemblance between him and the children.
Your grip on the plate had tightened. So much so that, for a brief and alarming moment, you had looked like you might actually swing it at him. And you would have, tooâprobablyâif Tsumiki had not stepped in just in time to prevent what would have gone down in history as Satoru Gojoâs most undignified possible death: by pastry.
You did not stay for tea that day, even though you usually did. That time, embarrassment had won. Especially after Satoru, far too pleased with himself, teased you about attempted assault with baked goods as if it were a perfectly reasonable topic of conversation.
Before you left, he had given you his number.
Back then, Satoru avoided relationships. He was young, reckless, and allergic to commitment. More of a fuck-and-dip type of guy. He knew he would have treated you the same way, carelessly, and that definitely would have ruined the fragile connection between you and the kids. He did not want that. He liked knowing someone else watched over them too.
So he left everythingâyouâalone.
Now, years later, Satoru walked past your balcony without even pretending not to look. His footsteps, softened by Infinity, made no sound.
You still did not notice him. Of course you didnât. You were absorbed in something ordinaryâphone, tea, the quiet irritation of existing in a world that demanded attention in small, exhausting ways.
He could have called out your name and said hello. He could have started the conversation by asking if you remembered him and the time you nearly smashed a plate into his head. He could have asked you out on a dateâhe has not been on one in a while.
It would be nice to catch up,
Even if the date lead nowhere. Even if it was meaningless. Even if it would end up only being another way to pass time between exorcisms and obligations and the endless swallowing void of being Satoru Gojo.
He could have made this simple, but simplicity had never been his preference. It was too boring, and Gojo Satoru had never been good at boring things.
So he kept walking.
If he re-entered your life, it would not be quietly.
â§ â§ â§
A few days later, he sent the letter. Not a romantic confession. Certainly not a polite invitation to dinner either. Inside was one of Sukunaâs fingers, one that he had found a day or two ago.
Satoru calculated the outcome carefully.
It should attract a few low-level curses. Nothing dangerousânothing that would reach you properly, not in a neighbourhood as quietly cursed as yours. Just enough to stir the air. Enough to make the windows tremble in their frames. Enough to leave you uneasy when the lights flickered at night or the hallway felt a fraction too long.
Enough, in other words, to create a reason. A reason for him to appear, a reason to âsave the day.â
It would not hurt you.
It should not hurt you.
That distinction sat comfortably in his mind, like a rule that had never once been challenged. In his interpretation, it was simple mathematics: risk reduced, outcome controlled, Satoru Gojo inserted as necessary variable. A perfectly sane plan. Almost elegant, if he ignored the fact that it involved planting danger as a pretext for attention.
After all, who would refuse a date with a man who arrived just in time to save them from a curse?
Surely, you would not.
â§ â§ â§
When you came home that evening, shoulders aching and the faint smell of copier ink and stale office air still clinging stubbornly to your clothes, you nearly stepped on the envelope.
It sat perfectly centred on your doormat.
You paused mid-step, keys still pinched between your fingers. The hallway light hummed overhead with a tired, fluorescent buzz. Somewhere above you, old pipes groaned as water pushed through them like a reluctant sigh.
For a moment, you only looked at it. Then you nudged it with the toe of your shoe. No stamp. No address. No name. Just thick, expensive paper, the kind of material used for wedding invitations or legal documents.
The envelope barely bent when you picked it up.
You glanced down the empty corridor once more, as if expecting someone to still be standing there watching, before unlocking your door and stepping inside.
The lock clicked shut behind you.
You did not open the envelope immediately. Only later, when you were curled on the couch with your legs tucked beneath you, a rerun of a show you barely watched murmuring from the television, did you finally tear it open.
The tearing of paper sounded unnaturally loud in the apartment.
Paper split cleanly beneath your fingers before something small and weighted dropped into your lap. You flinched.
At first, you did not understand what you were looking at. A bundle, tightly wrapped in thick, yellowed bandages. Old-looking. The cloth the colour of aged parchment left too long in the dark. Dark ink crawled across its surface in patterns you did not recognise.
Your instincts recoiled before your thoughts caught up.
Cold pricked along your spine. You did not touch the small bundle. You only stared at it as the air in the room shifted, not temperature, but in a feeling, like the space itself had thickened around you.
You thought you saw something under the bandagesâjust for a second. A faint distortion, like heat rippling off asphalt in summer. Except darker.
Slowly, carefully, as if the bundle might unwrap itself if you were careless, you lifted it and placed it on the coffee table.
Eventually, exhaustion caught up with your fear. You had work in the morning and you were more than ready to go to bed. So you did what you always did when something did not fit into your understanding of the world. You refused to engage with it.
You should have thrown the bundle away. Instead, you stood, walked to your bookshelf, and placed it on the highest shelf you hadâbehind a row of old novels you never reread but could not bring yourself to discard.
Out of sight, yet not out of mind.
By most standards, you were painfully normal.
You paid your bills on time. You filed your taxes. You complained, regularly and with conviction, about traffic lights that stayed red too long and grocery prices that seemed to climb out of spite. You rewatched the same shows until entire episodes lived in your head like second memories, until you could recite entire scenes without looking at the screen.
Yeah, you were pretty normal, except for one small, inconvenient detail.
You could see curses.
They lingered where light struggled to reachâcorners of ceilings, the tight space beneath stairwells, the blind spots between streetlamps. They slid along alley walls, their shapes wrong in ways your mind tried and failed not to correct. Some were small and twichy things. Others were swollen, layered massses stitched together like an unfinshed crafts project.
You learned early not to stare too long because if you did, they seemed to notice.
For half of your life, you had convinced yourself it was stress caused hallucinations. When you got older, you blamed it all on trick of light and fatigue. That last belief lasted until your great-great-grandfather gripped your wrist from his hospital bed.
His skin had been paper-thin, translucent in places, stretched over bone. The monitors beside him beeped in a slow, indifferent rhythm. But his eyesâhis eyes were sharp. Unnaturally so. Too awake for a man so close to leaving.
He was not looking at you. His gaze was fixed slightly to the side, past your shoulder, toward the corner of the room where something small and green and wrong clung to wall like a stain that refused to be scrubbed away.
His fingers tightened around your wrist with surprising strength when he realized you knew what he was looking at.
âI see them too.â
His voice was dry, he did not look at you when he spoke again.
âAlways have.â
That was all he gave you. No explanation or comfort that might have softened the impact of it. Just inheritance of the disturbing knowledge that you were not insane.
He died before you could ask anything else.
The only other person who ever seemed to acknowledge that fractured layer of reality without flinching was Satoru Gojo, the strange guardian of the children who once lived across the hall.
You remembered the moment he found out you were like him.
The hallway had smelled of lemon cleaning solution. The fluorescent lights overhead flickered in uneven pulses, as you stepped outside with a trash bag and stopped so abruptly the plastic crinkled loud in your grip.
It was there.
A curse clung to the ceiling above your door like wet clay thrown and forgotten. Blackened. Glossy. One swollen eye rolled slowly in its socket. A thin mouth hung open beneath it, lipless, slack, dripping something viscous that evaporated before it ever reached the floor.
Your lungs locked. Your fingers tightened around the bag until plastic bit into skin. You had never seen one that close to your home before.
Then, behind youâ
âYou can see them too?â
The voice was casual, curious, as if he had asked whether you preferred tea or coffee and not whether you could see things that were not supposed to exist.
ââŚYeah.â
That was the entire conversation with Gojo.
The next day, the hallway was empty. The curse was gone, as if it had never been there at all. The same evening, there was a knock at your door.
You opened it to find Gojo leaning against the frame, sunglasses balanced lazily on the bridge of his nose despite the sun having set hours ago. One hand in his pocket. The other reaching forward before you could fully register the movement.
His fingers wrapped around your wrist, he raised your hand and placed something into your palm.
A dagger.
Slim. Perfectly balanced. The metal cool and impossibly clean. Faint symbols ran along the blade.
âIn case one gets too close,â he said.
You had stared at the dagger, then at him, questions starting to form on the tip of your tongue. But there was no small talk that coud transition into please explain the supernatural horrors I can see everyday.
Before you could ask anything, he left.
Eventually, Megumi and Tsumiki moved away without goodbye. The apartment across the hall went dark and stayed that way. Gojo disappeared from your life as abruptly as he had entered it.
You woke with your throat burning. Dry and scratchy, like you had swallowed dust in your sleep. For a moment, you lay still, staring at the ceiling, trying to remember what had pulled you from slumber. Nothingâjust thirst.
You dragged yourself out of bed, half-awake, eyes barely open, the cool floor pressing against your bare feet. The hallway stretched longer than usual. Quieter. You didnât notice the shadows pooling too thickly in the corners. Didnât hear the soft creak of wood that wasnât your own steps. Didnât feel the weight of something watching.
In the kitchen, your hands moved on autopilot. You grabbed a glass, turned on the tap. Water sputtered, then flowed steady, washing down the scratch in your throat as you brought the glass up to your mouth. You leaned against the counter, taking small sips.
âWhere is it?!â a shrill voice screeched.
It didnât come from a single point. It sliced through the airâmetallic, grating, like claws dragged across slate.
Before you could even blink, the world flipped. One second you were leaning on the counter; the next, you were slammed face-first into the kitchen tiles. Glass crashed somewhere nearby, shards scattering across the floor. Pain bloomed across your ribs from the impact. Your cheek scraped against cold tile as your body hit the ground.
Something heavy pressed into your back, pinning you. You struggled, palms sliding uselessly on slick tile. The pressure intensified, forcing the air from your lungs. Your heart hammered violently, as if it might tear itself free from your chest. Sweat slicked your hands.
âTell me, human! I do not have time for this!â the voice screeched directly into your ear.
Your stomach compressed. Something cracked. You choked on a scream, fearing it had been your rib, only to realize it was a piece of glass beneath you.
âWHERE IS IT?â
Tears blurred your vision, hot and humiliating. Panic ripped through you. Sleep evaporated completely.
âIâI donât know what you want!â you stammered, voice broken, not even thinking to lie because you truly didnât know.
A fist tangled in your hair. You screamed again as you were yanked upright, your scalp igniting with pain, like thousands of needles driving into your skull at once. Your feet left the ground.
âSukunaâs finger,â the voice hissed, closeâtoo close. âI can feel it hereâŚâ
You were spun around.
The curse loomed before youâhuman-shaped, but grotesquely wrong. Limbs bent at impossible angles. A mouth slit filled with jagged, uneven teeth stretched unnaturally wide. Its eyes gleamed with sharp intelligence. You had never seen one like this. You had never heard one speak.
It snarled, then flung you sideways.
You crashed into the counter, the edge biting into your back, then collapsed to the floor. White-hot pain shot up your spine.
âFETCH IT.â
It stepped back slightly, granting spaceâpermission for you to move.
Your brain barely functioned. Survival instincts took over. You scrambled upright and bolted toward your bedroom like it was a sanctuary, even though you knew it wasnât. It would have been wiser to run out of the apartment entirely, but that thought only surfaced as you slammed the door behind you, fumbling for the lock, hands shaking violently.
You didnât have any severed fingers stashed in the pantry. You didnâtâ
The bookshelf.
The bandaged bundle.
Your stomach dropped.
But you didnât run for the living room. No. You ripped open drawers, flinging clothes aside, tearing through your closet. Your heart pounded so loudly you could barely hear your own ragged breathing.
The dagger.
Where had you put it?
You hadnât needed it in years.
Your eyes landed on your nightstandâyour phone. You lunged. Fingers moved faster than they ever had. Contacts. Scroll. Gojo. You had thought about calling him before, sometimesâjust to ask about Megumi and Tsumikiâbut you always hesitated. Always locked your phone and didnât do it.
This time, you didnât hesitate.
You pressed call. You tried not to think about the possibility that he had changed his number, or that you were calling someone you hadnât spoken to in years. He was your only option for survival because it wasnât like you could call the police. What were you even supposed to say? Hello, a curse is attacking me? They would have taken it for a prank call.
The ringing barely began when the bedroom door exploded inward.
Wood splintered like brittle paper. Hinges tore free. The door shattered across the room.
You screamed as the shockwave threw you backward. The phone flew from your hand, skidding just out of reach.
âI donât have time for games, human,â the curse growled, stepping through the wreckage. Its presence pressed into your lungsâthick, suffocating, smelling of rot and metal.
Your knees buckled. Even if they hadnât, there was nowhere to go. You crawled backward until your shoulders hit the side of the bed. Your eyes darted franticallyâno escape route, no opening large enough to slip past it without dying.
âIâI donât have it! Please, justââ
You didnât even know what you were begging for. Mercy?Understanding? Anything? But curses did not offer either.
It advanced slowly. Each step made the floor groan. Your thoughts fractured: run, scream, grab somethingâanythingâbut nothing would save you. You were going to die.
As its shadow swallowed the space between you, you squeezed your eyes shut. If this was itâif this was the endâyou did not want this monstrosity to be the last thing you ever saw.
A flashâblinding whiteâerupted through your closed eyelids so violently it felt like the world had been set on fire behind your face. Heat followed a heartbeat later. Then a sharp, crackling sizzle, like live wires snapping apart. Red sparks fractured the darkness. A violent bzzz rattled the windows.
Silence.
You curled into yourself on instinct, knees pulled to your chest, forehead pressed hard down, fingers locked over the back of your head as if that alone could hold you together. Your whole body shook. Tears spilled without permission, soaking into your pajamas. Every breath came ragged, shallow.
You waited.
For claws. For teeth. For the end.
Nothing came.
Ten agonising seconds passed. Then thirty. Still nothing.
Slowly, you forced your fingers apart and blinked through the blur of tears. Satoru Gojo stood in the ruin of your bedroom like he had simply stepped in for tea. Hands in his pockets. Head tilted. That familiar grinâtoo easy, too bright for a room that looked like it had been torn open.
âYou called?â
Your mind lagged as your gaze darted all over. Splintered door. Scorched air. The metallic tang of something burned out of existence still hanging faintly in the room.
The curse was gone.
You stayed half-folded against the bed, arms drawn tight around yourself.
Gojo looked⌠older, but familiar. His white hair still shone like silver. His smile was still thereâstill infuriatingly soft at the edges, like he hadnât just erased something that had been seconds away from killing you. However, his uniform fit differently than you remembered. The fabric sat differently across him now, stretched over broader shoulders, shaped by muscle you didnât remember being so defined.
The biggest in change his appereance was the blindfold. Gone were the round sunglasses he used to wear. In their place, a sleek strip of black cloth was wrapped around his eyes.
âGojo?â you managed. His name cracked on your tongueâfragile in a way that made it feel dangerous to say too loudly, as if you were afraid he was just a part of your imagination.
He tilted his head slightly at the sound.
âThat would be me,â he said lightly.
He stepped forward. Each step landed softly over the ruined floorboards, sound threading through the silence like a metronome trying to convince your heartbeat to slow down and follow it. He stopped just short of you, not wanting to crowd you.
His smile shifted, softening by a fraction.
âYou know,â he started, voice slipping easily back into teasing, as if he were gently trying to stitch normality back into the air, âusually when someone calls me after maaany years, thereâs a âhelloâ first. Maybe a âhow have you been.â Basic courtesy.â
His head angled toward the wreckage behind you, then back to you again.
ââŚBut Iâll let it slide,â he added, slower now. âI guess. Ifââ
He didnât get to finish the sentence because you moved.
There was no elegance to in your movements. Just a sudden collapse of everything you had been holding in place since the moment the curse had entered your home.
You launched yourself at him, clumsy and uncontrolled.
For a heartbeat, he didnât react at all. Then his hand braced against the floor behind you, steadying both of you as your momentum forced him back just slightly.
Your arms locked around him and you buried your face into his chest. It was colder than you expected at first, like stepping into winter air too quickly. Then warmth bled through, slow and steady, spreading outward in quiet waves that made your shaking worse before it made it better.
âIââ your voice fractured completely. âThank you.â
You didnât realise you were crying again until you felt your tears soaking into his jacket.
He didnât answer right away. He just lifted his hand slowly, resting it lightly against the back of your head. The other settled around your shouldersâcareful again, as if he was handling something fragile he wasnât sure he was allowed to hold.
âWell,â he murmured at last, softer than before, almost reluctant to break the silence, âthatâs one way to say hello.â
â§ â§ â§
It took you about an hour to really calm down.
An hour spent sitting on the floor in Gojoâs lap, your knees still weak, your body refusing to trust the fact that the world was no longer actively trying to kill you. Your fingers stayed twisted into the front of his uniform like a lifeline, knuckles pale.
At some point, your breathing evened out. The violent shaking faded. Tears dried stiff against your cheeks, leaving faint salt tracks you pretended not to feel.
Gojo didnât rush you. He didnât joke. Didnât flirt. Didnât fill the silence with anything that might crack it open too soon. One hand stayed steady against your back, warm and grounding, tracing slow, absent circles that anchored you more than any words could have.
Eventually, awareness returned in pieces rather than all at once. First came the embarrassment. Then the slow, creeping realization of proximity. Then the very human understanding that you were currently clinging to a man you hadnât seen in years like your life depended on him, which, in a way, it had.
Slowly, carefully, you pulled back. Your hands lingered for half a second too long before releasing his jacket, reluctant in a way you immediately hated yourself for noticing. You avoided looking at his face as you stood.
You flicked on the light and immediately regretted it.
Your bedroom looked like a crime scene. The door was obliteratedâsplintered wood hanging like broken ribs. Clothes spilled from your closet in chaotic heaps. A lamp lay on its side, its shade cracked. Somehow, impossibly, the walls still stood, and the windows remained intact.
You stepped into the hallway half-expecting the rest of the apartment to mirror it But the living room was almost untouched. The kitchen, too, looked strangely ordinary.
Your front door was still locked.
The only thing that looked out of place was the living room windowâcracked open just a fingerâs width, letting in pale early-morning air that smelled faintly of rain and something clean enough to feel unreal after what had just happened.
Gojo followed quietly behind you as you began cleaning.
You moved on autopilot.
Smashed glass. Broken fragments. Shaky hands that refused to stop trembling no matter how carefully you tried to steady them. You told yourself it was practical. Necessary. Something to do with your body while your mind tried to stitch itself back together.
He tried to talk a few times.
You answered without really hearing yourself, your voice distant, like it belonged to someone else speaking through a wall.
When you retrieved the bandaged bundle from the bookshelf, his posture changed immediately.
âIs that what it was after?â he asked.
You nodded, unable to look at it for long now that you knew what it was supposed to be.
âI got it in a letter,â you said quickly, too quickly, like you needed to justify its presence in your life. âI didnâtâI didnât know what it was. I just kept it.â
You handed it over.
Gojo went still.
You couldnât see his eyes beneath the blindfold, but the shift in the air was unmistakable. His shoulders tightened. His tongue pressed briefly against the inside of his cheek, like he was holding back a reaction he didnât want to show.
For a moment, it looked like he might speak. He didnât. He simply took the bundle and slipped it into his pocket.
The words slipped out before you could stop them.
âDo you⌠want tea?â you asked. A pause. âOr coffee?â
It sounded absurd the moment the question left your mouth.Yet it was a fragile attempt to hold the moment in place. To delay whatever came after this. To keep him here a little longer because you didn't want to be alone.
Gojo looked at you for a beat longer than necessary, then exhaled something almost like amusement.
âTea sounds good.â
He watched you the entire time you worked in the kitchen, openly entertained now, like the concept of you boiling water had become unexpectedly fascinating.
Your apartment made him look bigger than you remembered him beingâtoo tall for the space, shoulders nearly brushing doorframes as he moved through it. He ducked slightly out of habit when passing through narrow spaces, following you from room to room, not letting you out of his sight completely.
ââyouâre a teacher?â you asked when he told you so, glancing at him over your shoulder with open skepticism.
He grinned instantly. âDonât I look like one?â
âNo,â you said without hesitation. âYou look like someone who should not be trusted around children.â
He laughedâbright, unrestrained, too loud for the quiet that had settled back into your apartmentâand despite everything, something in your chest loosened enough that you found yourself exhaling a reluctant laugh too.
When the tea was ready, you both settled in the living room on the couch. The cups warmed your hands. Dawn spilled slowly through the window, soft and bruised with early light.
Gojo talked. About Jujutsu High. About curses. About sorcerers.
He explained just enough that your exhausted mind could follow without breaking apart completely, though the words still felt like they belonged to a different world entirely. Curses. Cursed energy. Sorcerers. The fact that he was apparently the strongest of them al, which he repeated with confidence at least five times.
He mentioned Megumi more than once too, and something in his voice softened each time, pride threading through it in a way you didnât remember hearing before. When you asked about Tsumiki, though, his answer thinned. He redirected the conversation gently but firmly, like closing a door without making it obvious it had been shut.
You didnât push. You kept listening instead, hovering somewhere between shock and relief, as if your mind hadnât decided yet whether to accept any of this as real.
Eventually, he asked about you and suddenly, your life felt small.
âI just⌠bounced around after graduating,â you said at last, eyes fixed on your tea. âDifferent jobs. Nothing really stuck.â
âI always figured youâd do something interesting,â he hummed.
You let out a quiet snort. âI work in an office.â
âTragic,â he said gravely. âWeâre going to have to rescue you from that immediately.â
You rolled your eyes, but warmth still crept into your chest anyway. Talking to him was easy in a way that unsettled you more than it should have. You had expected awkward silences, forced politeness, something brittle and unfamiliar. Instead, it felt like slipping back into a conversation that had never properly ended.
Sunlight spread further into the apartment, turning dust motes into drifting gold. Gojo stood and stretched, rolling his shoulders with an ease that made the movement look almost lazy. His gaze swept the room again, lingering briefly on the slightly open window before he exhaled and turned back to you.
You stood as well.
âYou shouldnât stay here alone tonight,â he said, still half-distracted by the space around him.
âHave to,â you replied dryly. âNot like I can afford to stay anywhere else.â
You didnât add the rest. That the thought of being alone again made something tight coil in your chest. That silence, after everything that had happened, suddenly felt too large to exist in. Or that you were now painfully aware of how small your apartment really was and how vulnerable you were inside it.
Gojo turned his head slightly at your answer. Then, as if the thought had simply arrived fully formed and unbothered by consequences, he said, âCome with me, then.â
You remained quiet.
âThere are empty rooms at the school,â he continued. âYou can stay until I sort this out. Until itâs safe.â
You hesitated, your bottom lip caught between your teeth, because logically, it was absurd. Going with himâsomeone you had barely known properly, someone who had just torn a curse apart in your bedroom like it was nothingâto a place you had never even heard of before today should have set off every alarm in your body.
It should have felt like a mistake and yet it didnât. Because the alternative was staying here alone, listening to your own heartbeat echo through empty rooms, waiting for something you couldnât see but now knew existed.
You looked at him, at the ease in his posture, the absolute certainty that you would say yes.
ââŚOkay,â you said at last.
His smile widened immediately.
âExcellent decision,â he said brightly, clapping his hands once as if sealing the agreement. âDonât worry. I promise only minimal life-threatening incidents.â
âThat is not reassuring,â you muttered, though your mouth twitched despite yourself.
After changing into warmer clothes, you packed an overnight bag. Just essentials. A change of clothes. Toothbrush. Phone charger. The normal things people bring when they are absolutely, definitely not uprooting their lives.
As you locked your apartment door, Gojo lingering by your side. You kept reminding yourself that this was temorary, that you will stay at school only until things settle. Until it's safe to return.
â§ â§ â§
What was supposed to be a few days away from home somehow turned into nearly four weeks of living in the Jujutsu High dorms.
The first night had felt temporary. You kept your shoes by the door, your bag zipped, your mind insisting you would leave any moment. The second night had felt the same, as had the third. But by the end of the first week, your bag sat half-unpacked in the corner like it had always belonged there, clothes slowly migrating into drawers without you ever quite remembering deciding to stay.
Every morning, you woke tangled in sheets, sunlight filtering through the curtains, warm against your face. The air carried a faint mix of pine, old wood, and distant incense drifting in from somewhere deeper in the campus. And every morning, the same thought returned like a habit you couldnât break: you should go home. You told yourself that while brushing your teeth. While tying your shoes. While standing too long in front of the courtyard windows.
There was always that lingering sense that you were occupying borrowed spaceâyou werenât a sorcerer, not a student, not anything that belonged in a place like this. And yet that thought dulled with time. The campus was quieter than you had expected, almost eerily so. You rarely saw more than a handful of students or teachers, and most days it felt less like a school and more like a half-forgotten shrine.
During the day, you wandered the grounds with a book tucked under your arm. Gravel crunched softly beneath your shoes. Leaves whispered overhead, shifting in slowly in the wind. Students passed occasionally, bowing politely or watching you with open curiosity. You sat beneath shaded trees, reading without really reading. No emails, no deadlines, no fluorescent office lights humming overhead.
You had taken unpaid leave after the attack, telling your boss you had a family emergency. Technically, that wasnât a lie. But bills still existed. Your job still existed. Your apartment still existed, somewhere out there in a life you were increasingly detached from. You were supposed to go back. Yet every time you brought it up, Gojo already had a reason why you couldn't leave just yet.
At first, it wasnât safe. The curse might not have acted alone. Someone might come looking for you.
Then your apartment was declared a disaster zone. Returning wasnât possible until repairs were finished. You had no idea how you were supposed to afford any of it, but Gojo had waved the concern away with an easy, careless, âThe school has funds for situations like this.â
Then he insisted you couldnât leave until he identified whoever had sent you Sukunaâs fingerâconveniently neglecting to mention he was the sender.
Eventually, the excuses began to wear thin.
You stood in the dorm room that had stopped feeling temporary and leaned against the desk, arms crossed.
âI have to go back,â you told him. âI canât miss any more work. My boss is blowing up my phone. And you said my apartmentâs fixed, soââ
Gojo sighed dramatically, just like he did everytime you decided to talk about this.
âFiiiiine,â he groaned, flopping backward onto your bed. The mattress dipped under his weight as he sprawled out shamelessly, long limbs claiming far too much space.
âYou learn how to fight,â he announced, pointing lazily at you from where he lay upside down across your pillows. âProperly. With the dagger I gave you. Then you can go.â
âIâm not a sorcerer,â you argued immediately. âI donât need combat training. Iâve successfully avoided curses my entire lifeâuntil one broke into my bedroom because someone thought mailing me a cursed finger was a fun social experiment.â
Since arriving, you had been given a crash course in a world you had never asked to understand. Curses were manifestations of negative emotion. Sorcerers fought them. Jujutsu High trained them, and Satoru Gojoâapparentlyâwas the strongest sorcerer alive, a fact he had repeated with alarming enthusiasm whenever the opportunity arose.
He had also, far too casually, suggested more than once that you might have potential to become a sorcerer since you could see the curses, but you refused to even entertain the thought.
âWhat if one attacks you again?â he asked more quietly when you still refused.
The humor in his voice thinned at the edges.
âI know I put myself on your speed dial,â he continued, scratching the back of his neck, a grin returning as if he could physically shrug off the seriousness of the question, âbut Iâm a very busy, responsible adult. I canât always arrive dramatically to save you.â
Your gaze flicked away. The memory of claws and pressure and breathless panic lingered like a bruise under the skin.
ââŚFine,â you said at last. âOne week. You teach me whatever you think I need to know, and then Iâm moving out.â
âFour weeks,â he replied instantly.
âThree.â
He tilted his head, pretending to consider it.
âHm. I suppose I could turn you into a semi-competent fighter in three weeks,â he said. âAfter all, I am Gojo Satoru. The strongest. The most handsome. The most talented teacher to ever existââ
You grabbed a pen from the desk and threw it at him.
He caught it midair without looking.
Show-off.
âYou mean the most annoying person Iâve ever met,â you corrected, though your mouth betrayed you with a faint curve.
Gojo sat up slowly, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees, blindfold angled toward you as if he could see you anyway.
âOh?â he said, voice dipping just slightly. âAnd yet you agreed to spend three more weeks with me.â
Your lips parted, but you didn't reply because he was right.
đٞif youâd like to be added to my permanent taglist and get notified whenever I post any of my works, leave a comment under this post .á
đٞif you prefer updates for a specific story only, you can also leave a comment here or on a storyâs masterlist (all of my works can be found here).
OR alpha!gojo and alpha!geto are clearly interestedâborderline obsessedâbut youâre not about to give in that easily, duh
⯠masterlist â previous chapter | next chapter
⯠pairing: gojo/reader/geto
⯠content: +18, omegaverse, not canon compliant, canon typical violence, love triangle, pining, forced proximity, reader (omega) is a sorcercer, toxic vibes, plenty of angst and fluff, eventual smut. . .
⯠a/n: the story feels familiar? it may be.
CHAPTER TWO.
âCare to explain what the fuck you were thinking?â
Never in your life had you wondered how high you could count before giving up. Yet by Friday morning, you'd discovered the answerâmuttering every number aloud, perfectly enunciated, all the way to six hundred and eighty-nine.
You hadn't slept. Not really. There might have been an hour somewhere in the middle of the night when exhaustion finally dragged you underâa thin, fragile sort of sleep that shattered the moment you became aware of it. You woke soon after, restless and even more irritated, thrashing in bed and twisting from one side to the other. The sheets tangled around your legs until you had to kick free.
Every position felt wrong. The pillow was too soft. The air in the room too staleâtoo thick. Suffocating. Pressing on you like a heavy weight.
This wasnât unusualâthe restlessness. Neither were the nerves that piled up until all you wanted to do was slam your head into a wall hard enough to knock yourself unconscious. At least then your mind would finally shut the fuck up. Even if only for a little while.
Before difficult missions, sleep often came reluctantly. Your mind liked to rehearseâstrategies, escape routes, every possible thing that could go wrong. You'd lie awake running through scenario after scenario until you were satisfied you could handle them all, until you'd convinced yourself there would be no surprises because you'd already imagined every possible outcome.
But for fuck's sakeâtomorrow's mission wasn't difficult. Low-level curses. Grade Four. Nothing you couldn't handle. Nothing you hadn't faced before. So why did the thought of getting out of bed make your stomach twist?
It took the entire night to admit it.
It wasn't the mission.
It was them.
The realization tasted bitter.
You rolled it around in your mind, annoyance flaring as you finally acknowledged it. You even caught yourself wondering why you couldn't have been partnered with just Getoâassuming going alone wasn't an option. Even that would've been preferable to being forced to spend time around Gojo.
You were still tense around Geto, always careful to keep your distance, but he was... manageable. Controlled. Predictable in a way that made him easier to deal with, even if you couldn't quite read him. Easier to be around than Gojo, at least, who you knew would be unbearable today; especially considering you hadn't seen him for an entire day, which meant he'd had nearly twenty-four uninterrupted hours to come up with new ways to get under your skin.
Hours later, you finally gave up on pretending to sleep and dragged yourself out of bed.
With far too much time before departure, you moved slowly, trying to ignore the relentless ticking of the clock on the wall. You didn't rush. You took your time getting ready. Still, there were only so many times you could adjust your uniform, brush nonexistent dust from your shoulders, or straighten a collar that was already perfectly straight.
Eventually, with nothing left to stall over, you flopped back onto the bed fully dressed, staring at the ceilingâready for the day to be over before it had even begun.
For a moment, your phone found its way into your hand, your thumb hovering over Utahime's contact. Back in Kyoto, she was the closest thing you had to a real friend. And she was probably the only person capable of talking you down when your thoughts started spiraling like this.
Whenever stress got the better of youâwhether it was a legitimate problem or something completely ridiculousâUtahime always seemed to know exactly what to say. Somehow, she could untangle the knots in your head without making you feel stupid for having them in the first place.
Your thumb hovered over the call button.
Just do it.
A small part of you was already imagining her sleepy voice answering the phone.
Another part immediately reminded you what time it was.
Too early.
You shouldn't wake her up.
With a groan, you locked the screen and tossed the phone onto the mattress beside you. It bounced once before disappearing into the blankets.
â§ â§ â§
You didn't skip breakfast. Running on fumes and vending machine snacks wasn't an option today. Thankfully, the cafeteria was deserted when you wandered through the doors.
You claimed a table near the back and ate in silence, scrolling aimlessly through your phone, forcing yourself to focus on anything other than the thoughts that hadn't stopped spiraling since yesterday.
A painfully boring video played on repeat, but you were too tiredâand too lazyâto bother finding something better.
The cafeteria doors swung open. You didn't hear them. Didn't notice the footsteps or the low, muffled whispers that followed. Not until two trays slammed down onto your table.
You jumped, your phone slipping from your hand and clattering against the surface.
âFuck,â you hissed under your breath. Your heart slammed against your ribs as your head snapped up. âWhat is wrong with you?!â
Geto was already seated across from you, posture relaxed, expression as unreadable as ever. Gojoâpredictablyâdropped into the seat beside you, far too close for comfort. You immediately scooted away, dragging your tray with you.
âTsk, tsk, tsk.â Gojo clicked his tongue, wagging a finger before pointing it at you. âSomeone's got their head in the clouds. That's how you get mauled by big, bad, ugly curses.â
You shot him a glare.
âBut don't worry, little omega,â he continued, completely unbothered and clearly enjoying the way you triedâand failedâto hide your irritation. âYou've got us to keep you safe. Won't even need to do anything. Just stick close and look pretty. Mission's gonna be easy peasy, yeah?â
âDon't call me that,â you snapped, hating the nickname and refusing to let it stick.
The moment the words left your mouth, you regretted them. It would've been smarter to ignore him. To let it pass. Because even through those ridiculous round glassesâthe ones you'd never seen him withoutâyou felt his attention sharpen instantly at the open disgust in your voice. Something darkened behind the lenses. A slow, knowing smile tugged at his mouth, and you just knew he'd spend the rest of the day looking for excuses to call you that again.
You decided you didnât need to endure this. You still had an hour before departure. An hour you could spend literally anywhere else. You stood abruptly, snatching up your phone and shoving it into your pocket.
âSatoru,â Geto said mildly. His eyes followed you with far too much interest before shifting back to Gojo. A sigh escaped him. âLook what you did. I told you to play nice.â
Something about the comment rubbed you the wrong way. It wasn't just teasingâthough it was definitely that, too. It felt deliberate. Like Geto's words carried a second meaning. Like he was testing something. Prodding. Waiting to see how Gojo would react.
And react he did.
âAww, princess, cooome ooon.â Gojo pouted dramatically. His arm shot out, fingers closing loosely around your wristâenough to stop you. âDon't leave.â
You froze.
Your gaze dropped to his hand. His fingers were wrapped around your wristâbut they weren't touching you. An invisible layer, roughly three centimeters thick, separated his grip from your skin.
Across the table, Geto leaned forward, unmistakably satisfied, like a theory had just been confirmed.
When neither of you spoke, Gojo followed your stare. He blinked. Realization dawned as he registered what he was holdingâand the fact that he couldn't feel the warmth of your skin.
The silence that followed felt deafening. You swore you could hear a high-pitched ringing in your ears. Pressure built behind your eyes. Something heavy like a stone settled in your chest.
You knew you should say something. Or pull away. Instead, you stayed perfectly still. Your mind screamed at you to move, but your body refused to listen, locked in place by the insticts despite every frantic command you hurled at yourself to react. To do something. Anything.
Gojo squeezed tighter, testing his grip on your wrist.
The barrier didn't budge. It took everything you had to keep it that way. Your cursed energy buzzed violently beneath your skin, flaring in sharp response each time his fingers pressed against it.
Then he grew bolder.
His arms slid around your waist, wrapping around the barrier instead of you. Pulling you closer, he settled his hands at your hips. Even seated, his head was level with your chest, his presence crowding your space until it felt impossible to breathe.
âThis is why it's so hard to sense your cursed energy,â Gojo muttered, more to himself than to you or Geto. His fingers pressed curiously against the invisible layer, as though it were the most interesting thing he'd encountered all week. â...Or you.â
That snapped you out of it.
Your muscles finally unlocked. You stepped back immediately. Heat rushed up your neck. Your cheeks burned as your mind caught up with what had just happened.
âIs this your innate technique?â Geto asked.
When you looked at him, he wore the expression of someone who already knew the answer.
âYeah,â you said. Your voice came out quieter than intended, lacking its usual bite. âSomething like that.â
âThen why do you never take it down?â Gojo asked.
Across the table, Geto raised an eyebrow.
âOh.â Gojo paused. Then the pieces clicked into place. âRight.â
The moment the gears visibly began turning in his headâthe sharp smile curling across his lips, anything but friendlyâyour stomach sank.
[ Gojo's POV ]
Gojo Satoruâthe Six Eyes, the strongest, someone who firmly believed he was the smartest person in any room and perceptive to an almost irritating degreeâhad somehow managed to completely overlook thatâyour barrier.
For the first time in a long while, he was quiet. Genuinely quiet. No commentary. No teasing. No half-baked jokes designed solely to get a reaction out of you. Nothing but the occasional tight-lipped mhm slipping past him whenever Suguru attempted to start a conversation.
He ate without really looking at his food, chewing out of habit rather than hunger, all while resisting the increasingly persistent urge to reach across the table and touch you again when you sat back down.
His mind replayed the past week on an endless loop. From early Monday morning, when he'd dragged Suguru out of bed at an ungodly hour because he had to see the new transfer student who mightâor might notâbe an omega, to now. To today. To the moment he'd been forced to confront something he absolutely should have noticed sooner.
It was almost embarrassing.
Almost.
Satoru could blame himself for the oversight. And maybeâmaybeâhe did, just a little. But most of the blame landed squarely on Suguru, who had obviously known. The bastard had clearly pieced things together long before today and decided not to share. Worse, he'd deliberately set up that little experiment and used Satoru to confirm his theory.
Logically, Satoru understood why you kept your barrier up. He wasn't stupid. That understanding, however, did absolutely nothing to stop it from irritating him.
The fact that he couldn't touch you was one thing. He'd already been keeping his distance. More or less. Sure, he constantly hovered around you. Constantly poked and prodded with comments designed to get under your skin. Constantly tested boundaries just to see where they were. But despite appearances, he wasn't completely clueless. There were lines that genuinely shouldn't be crossed and he knew that.
But hiding your scent?
That was something else entirely.
Yes, it was selfish to think he had any claim to it. Any unspoken right to know. He was aware of that; he wasn't an idiot. Just painfully arrogant. And perhaps a little possessive in ways he had absolutely no intention of unpacking.
Still, it had been a long time since heâd had a real break. Time in the city. Time away from missions, away from Jujutsu High, away from the suffocating stench of alphas who seemed incapable of existing without flooding every room they entered with their scent.
And yet you'd deliberately hidden yourself. Kept everything sealed away behind that barrier. Refused to give him even the smallest glimpse. A minute would've been enough. Two, maybe. Just long enough for him to indulge to indulge. Long enough to remember what it felt like when his senses weren't constantly assaulted by something unpleasant.
He wouldn't have even touched you. Not if you didn't want him to. Just being close would've been enough.
Satoru swallowed hard. His mouth had suddenly gone dry.
When he'd first heard about a transfer from Kyoto, he hadn't paid much attention. He'd assumed it was a beta. Nothing particularly interesting about that. Then he'd overheard a conversation he wasn't supposed to hear. He hadn't learned much, just fragments. Half-whispered speculation. Loose pieces of information that should've meant nothing. But they'd been enough. Enough to know Tokyo was getting an omega.
After that, Satoru had practically vibrated with excitement. And somehowâmiraculouslyâhe'd managed to keep it to himself. He hadn't even told Suguru, which was unusual: Suguru was normally subjected to every stray thought that entered Satoru's head, every piece of gossip, every pointless observation, whether he wanted to hear it or not.
Satoru still wasn't entirely sure why he'd stayed quiet. It hadn't mattered in the end. Suguru had figured it out on his own. He'd probably overheard the same rumors. The same conversations he wasn't supposed to hear.
And he'd been the one to say it out loud first, casual and knowing, like the possibility of omega wandering trough these halls hadn't been driving him insane, too.
Satoru had pretended to be surprised when Suguru shared the news. Though, Suguru hadn't looked convinced. But just as Suguru hadn't called him out for lying, Satoru had kept his mouth shut as well.
â§ â§ â§
The three of you stood outside, waiting for the car.
Satoru leaned back against the wall, arms crossed, noticeably lacking his usual energy. He watched you and Suguru smokeâwatched you cough, then laugh when the first drag hit harder than expected. Watched the subtle rhythm of your conversation.
Suguru asked questions. You answered. Your answers precise, measured, revealing just enough without giving too much away. You were good at that. At talking while keeping everything at surface level.
You were talking about your barrier.
Suguru steered the conversation deliberately to the topic, nudging here and there, clearly probing.
You explained only the basicsâhow it functioned, how it interacted with your cursed energy. Something about metabolism, about how food intake affected how long you could maintain it. That was why you were constantly snacking because otherwise youâd need to drop it.
Thatâthat was what caught Satoruâs attention. And that was when he decided he was going to be mean today. Just a little.
If Suguru had chosen todayâof all daysâto use him as a tool, to poke and test a theory, then Satoru decided he had every right to run an experiment of his own.
How far he could push you before that barrier showed even the smallest crack?
In Satoruâs mind, it wasnât reckless. Todayâs mission wasnât difficult. Quite the opposite. Low-level curses, predictable patterns, confined spaceâthe perfect environment. Even if you got overwhelmed, even if things went sideways, he and Suguru would be there.
Plus, heâd already promised you that the two of them would take care of you, hadnât he? So you definitely had nothing to worry about.
And it wasnât like he wanted to hurt you. Of course not.
He would just apply a little more pressure than necessary. Enough to make you slip. Enough to find out what you smelled like beneath all that cursed energy and restraint. Because now that he knew you were hiding your scent, the not-knowing gnawed at him, and it would keep gnawing until he satisfied that curiosity. So it was better to get it over with quicklyâtoday, while he had the opportunity; he wasnât sure when the next mission with you would come up.
He lingered in the thought briefly, weighing the easier option.
He could just ask. Suggest you drop your innate technique for the ride. Frame it as concernâtell you it would help preserve your cursed energy for the fight, make things safer. It wouldnât even be a lie. It would be safer. At least ten times safer than slowly bleeding your stamina dry while curses chipped away at you.
But then⌠where was the fun in that?
Satoruâs mouth twitched, a faint smile threatening to surface as he pushed off the wall, spotting the car approaching.
No.
If he was going to do this, he wanted it instinctiveâfor you to be stripped bare by circumstance rather than persuasion. Something you didnât have time to think over or prepare for. And if that meant being a little cruel? Well⌠he was fine with that.
â§ â§ â§
[ Reader's POV ]
The car ride was strange, to say the least.
You sat in the front passenger seat while Geto and Gojo were squeezed into the back. No one spoke. Geto stared out the window, fingers tapping lightly against his knee. Gojo, every so often, watched you through the rearview mirrorâalways with that same lazy smirk that widened the moment your eyes met.
So far, the day was nothing like you had expected. The energy was calm, the alphas unusually quiet. If you pretended for a moment that the whole incidentâwhen they had finally confronted you about the barrierâhadnât happened, you could almost convince yourself that maybe youâd been freaking out for nothing. Maybe you really shouldnât have lost sleep over it.
Even after you arrived at the schoolâafter the curtain was lowered and you suggested splitting up, one floor eachâthere was no pushback. No teasing from Gojo. No objections from Geto.
It was definitely weird. You werenât used to this, but you figured that maybe Gojo and Geto were simply more focused on the mission, knowing when it was time to prioritize work rather than pester you.
The building was crawling with curses. You saw them before you even stepped insideâclinging to ceilings, slumped against walls like rotten growths. For the first time since Thursday, you were almost glad you werenât alone. Not because you couldnât handle it, but because you didnât have to. With all three of you, this should be over in hours. Alone, it wouldâve taken you the entire day to exorcise all of the curses.
You got the second floor entirely to yourself, Gojo claiming the third and leaving Geto to deal with the mess on the first and in the basement.
At first, it was easy. Most of the curses were sluggish, malformed things that barely reacted to your presence. Even when you drew their attention, they came at you in small numbers.
You preferred distance. Control. Not having to deal with surprisesâattacks you didnât see coming. So you relied on your cursed tools: silver throwing daggers, engraved with abstract patterns and imbued with cursed energy, dangling from the leather belt snug around your waist.
You worked cleanly.
You stood in the middle of the hallway near the stairs, repeating the same process: barriers snapping up around the curses, immobilising them, five daggers following in quick succession. Clean hits. You retrieved your tools, repositioned yourself, and started over.
Rinse and repeat. Rinse and repeat. Rinse and repeat.
And when you dared to think it was a little dull. Boring. Too easyâit all went downhill.
Suddenly, you had to move faster. Barely enough time to retrieve your daggers before they were flying from your hands again. Distance became meaningless. Maintaining your barrier meant you couldnât immobilize more than a handful at once, and the curses were swarming now.
You switched tactics, ignoring the way sweat made your clothing stick, the thickening air, the pressure building under your barrier that held it all in.
Two daggers clenched tightly in your hands, you charged. Slashing. Stabbing. Pulling free. Kicking curses away. Cutting their grabby limbs. Dodging, spinning, turning so fast your vision began to swim.
You couldnât be touchedânot reallyâbut you could be crowded. You tried not to think about that. Tried not to acknowledge what it would mean: pulling back, leaving the rest to Gojo and Geto, just like youâd promised Yaga.
For fuckâs sake, you were a Grade Two sorcerer. What good were you if you couldnât handle low-level curses like these, no matter how many there were? The question kept swirling in your mind, surfacing again and again, no matter how hard you tried to drown it out in the chaos of everything else.
What stung the most, however, what fueled your stubbornness to stay on that damn second floor, was the fact that you knew you could do it. You were good enough. Youâd fought worse.
But your barrier was draining you faster than you wanted to admit. Too much cursed energy spent just to keep it intact. It slowed you down, tripped you up, stole your edge and power because it had to be divided between barrier and fighting.
When you were finally pushed into a corner, surrounded on all sides, you knew. You were done. No matter how badly it bruised your pride, this was it. Time to retreat. Exceptâit was already too late. There was no opening. No space to escape. Trying to squeeze through would only make it worseâtrap you even moreâif you slipped on the slick gore and fell to the ground.
Your pulse spikedânot with adrenaline, but with pure panic. Daggers flashed in your hands as you slashed blindly. Legs kicked. Elbows struck. You fought to breathe, to focus, to remember how to inhale. You tried to ignore the fear-fueled thought that youâd gotten in over your headâthat after everything, you might be taken down by low-grade curses you could usually exorcise with your eyes closed.
You should have called for Gojo and Geto. Opened your mouth and screamed for help. But your jaw was locked tight, your mind emptyâunable to grasp that help was even an option. The only thought that existed was your barrier. Dropping it. Reclaiming that cursed energy. Using it to fight.
There was a shift in the air. Instantaneous. Almost imperceptible.
One moment, your senses were dulled. The next, they sharpened violently. The stench of rot hit firstâthick enough to turn your stomach. Instinct took over before thought.
Your mind went blank.
You moved faster than you could see, faster than you could think. By the time your mind tried to catch up, you were already in motion.
Daggers flew. Curses fell. The darkness that had enveloped you began to recede as the horde of curses circling youâfrom left to right, from the ceilingâslowly dwindled. Light crept back into the hallway.
When you blinked again, you were on the floor, on all fours, heaving.
You gulped the foul air, gagging because your barrier was gone. Without it, the filth clung to you. Your clothes were smeared, sticky. You lifted an arm to brush your hair back and nearly retched at the smell.
Something clamped around your arms, hauling you to your feet. Your knees buckled, hands shaking, but you reacted without hesitation. You turned sharply, driving the dagger you hadnât even realized you were holding forward, certain it was a curse youâd missed.
It didnât connect.
Gojo towered over you. He caught your wrist easily, twisting it just enough to force you to release the weapon. His grip was firm and unyielding, fingers digging into your arm as he held you in place. With his other hand, he pushed his glasses up onto his head.
His pupils were blown wide, eyes nearly blackâonly the thinnest ring of blue visible around the edges.
âLet me go,â you said, trying to wrench your arms free, your body still buzzing with adrenaline, not ready to be trapped again.
He let you goâbut before you could take a step back, his hands clamped down on your shoulders, anchoring you in place so you couldnt move away. You instinctively tried to raise your barrier. It flared weakly, flickeredâand collapsed. You had nothing left. Your cursed energy had been drained dry in the fight.
âIâm serious, Gojo.â Your voice wavered despite you trying to steady it. âGET. OFF.â
Gojo's lips pressed into a thin line. He didnât answer. Instead, his gaze dragged slowly over your face, lingering too long, scrutinising every detailâthe way your eyebrows pinched in confusion, the way you groaned, scrunching your nose. One hand slid from your shoulder to the back of your head, fingers threading into your hair as he forced you closer. Before you could react, his face dipped, pressing into your neckâbare skin, right beneath your collarbone. His fingers tightened, holding you there.
The moment the tip of his nose brushed that sensitive patch of skin, shivers ran down your spine, your thighs squeezed together, and the panic that had simmered down before exploded through you again.
You thrashed against him, scratching at his arms, shoving at his chest, trying desperately to break free, but he didnât budge an inch.
âStop,â Gojo growled into your skin.
Your body stilled instantly, betraying you even as your mind screamed at you to fight, to get awayâespecially when his lips replaced the tip of his nose, hot and wet, pressing into your neck. His tongue swiped over your salty skin, stealing the air from your lungs.
âYou smell so good,â he murmured, the words vibrating against you, muffled, but clear enough to make your stomach flip, your heart race.
This was too much. You needed to do something, but when your hands pressed against his broad chest, trying to push him away, he immediately caught on.
A low, dangerous growl rumbled from his chest as his teeth scraped along the hollow of your collarbone, up the side of your throat, retraced slowly by his tongue.
You needed tol get away from him. You couldn't let this contniue, what if heâ
âSatoru, you need to step back,â Getoâs voice cut inâlow, controlledâand relief flooded you so fast it nearly made you dizzy.
If anyone could control Gojo, make him snap out of whatever daze he was in, it definitely was his best friend, right?
âCanât,â Gojo replied, not moving, pressing into you even closer, like he was expecting Geto to tried to peel him off of you and he refused to let that happen.
You heard Geto approach before you felt him. His footsteps were nearly silent. Then his chest pressed into your back, close enough that you were caged between them. Heat rose through your body as if standing between them was standing in blazing fire licking at your skin.
âSatoru,â Geto said, a hand coming down on your shoulder. âMove.â
There was an edge to his voiceâsharp, threatening. When he tried to pull you away, Gojoâs head snapped up.
Gojo growled, teeth bared, lip curled. Pupils still blown wide. Both of his arms slid down to encircle your waist, yanking you back with possessive force.
You felt Geto stiffen behind you. Heard his teeth grind. His chest vibrated with a growl just as dangerous. You couldnât see his face, but you felt his hot breath fan over the top of your head as he steadied you. His hand refusing to leave your shoulder.
âActually,â Gojo said, tightening his grip around you, âI think you need to move your hand away from her, Suguru.â
Getoâs fingers only dug deeper into your skin, as if he feared Satoru would throw you over his shoulder and bolt.
This will not end well. You knew you needed to do something, but you were too afraid to move, to speak, even to breathe. It didnât help that your instincts were fighting you, urging you to stay exactly where you were: between two alphas whose attention had locked onto you. The brief thought that slipped through your mindâthat you might kind of enjoy it, the heat simmering in your abdomenâmade you immediately grimace at yourself.
Desperate, you gathered the scraps of your cursed energy. Something. Anything.
It took all your focus, but your barrier flickered once. Twice. Then it pushed outward. The invisible layer forced Getoâs hand off your shoulder, peeled Gojoâs arms from your waist. The pressure eased just enough for you to break free. Yet you didnât move.
The tension lingered. Thick. Suffocating. The feeling that they might rip into each otherâs throats didnât fade. Neither did the instinctive certainty that if you tried to run, their attention would turn on you insteadâthat their teeth might sink into you the moment you moved.
You didnât budge until Gojo inhaled sharply, scrunching his nose at the stench of curses that now replaced your dulled scent beneath the barrier, his pupils contracting as he swept his gaze down the hallway.
Before fleeing, you caught one last glimpse of Getoâhis eyes following you, wearing the same expression Gojo had when he first caught you. Hands in fists at his sides, fingers tightening as if he were about to block your path.
You didnât stop.
You didnât look back.
You bolted down the stairs, nearly tripping over your own feet, bursting outside, running across the courtyard, and didnât slow down until you reached the playground. There, your legs finally gave out.
You collapsed to the ground, your body submitting to gravity as your barrier flickered one last time and went out completely.
[ Geto's POV ]
When Suguru and Satoru stepped outside, Suguru half-expected heâd have to physically restrain him. He was already braced for itâmuscles coiled, cursed energy simmering just beneath his skin, ready to snap into place the second Satoru took a step toward you.
But Satoru didnât move. He stood there, hands in his pockets, posture loose in a way that felt wrong on himâtoo still, too contained. His gaze flicked toward you once, then away, jaw set as though heâd locked something dangerous behind his teeth.
Suguru didnât relax.
They watched you from across the courtyard.
You sat on one of the swings, elbows braced against your knees, head buried in your hands. The chains creaked faintly as you shifted your weight, the sound sharp in the quiet.
For a moment, Suguru thought you were crying. But you didnât move. Didnât shake. Didnât make a sound. Too still, folded in on yourself like you were trying to disappear.
The sight twisted something ugly in his gut.
Instinct screamed at him to go to youâto close the distance, to put himself between you and everything else, even if that âeverything elseâ was Satoru.
He forced the urge down.
Then you shifted. Just slightly. Your fingers curled into your sleeves. Your shoulders rose with a slow, shaky breath. When you finally lifted your head, there were no tears, but your gaze was dull and detached.
Suguru exhaled, realizing only then that heâd been holding his breath.
His emotions were a mess. His thoughts even harder to sort out.
On one hand, he was furious with Satoru.
There was no excusing what had happened. No clever reframing, no twisted logic that made it acceptable. Suguru understood the instinctâhell, he felt it himself, that pull toward youâbut understanding didnât make it forgivable. Especially when Satoru had ignored every warning sign, and Suguru knew damn well the Six Eyes werenât that oblivious.
You had fought him. Pushed him away. Made your fear unmistakable. Your scent alone should have been enough to snap Satoru out of it. It had been saturated with panic, clawing its way into Suguruâs lungs, igniting something primal and violent he rarely allowed himself to feel.
For a split second, Suguru imagined tearing Satoru apart. Not metaphoricallyâhands around his throat, cursed spirits tearing into pale flesh, bones giving way under pressure. Yet, unlike Satoru, he forced his instincts to settle.
But then there was the other part. The part that made his anger feel dangerous rather than righteous.
Back in the hallwayâbeneath the panic, beneath the rot and decay of cursesâthere had been something else. Your scent. Sweet. Warm. Vanilla-soft, with a hint of fruit, rich enough to linger long after youâd fled.
Even now, outside in the harsh wind, with distance finally between you and them, it clung stubbornly to Satoruâs clothes, to his skin.
The realization made Suguruâs mouth go dry. His throat bobbed as he swallowed, teeth grinding so hard it might as well have shattered.
And the worst partâthe part he hated most, the part he was truly angry with his friend forâwas that Satoru had gotten there first, had gotten to you first. Close enough to touch you without that barrier Suguru had noticed the moment you arrived; the barrier Satoru hadnât even realized was there until today.
When the car finally arrived, the crunch of tires over gravel pulled his attention back. Suguru watched your eyes flick between the vehicle and them, your shoulders tightening. It was obvious you didnât want to get in the car with either of them.
âYou stay here,â Suguru said.
Before Satoru could protest, he was already moving toward you.
He approached slowly, like you were an injured animal he was afraid might bolt at the slightest wrong step. He stopped well short of your space, careful not to crowd you.
âYou take the car,â he said quietly. Gentle, controlled. âIâll call for another one.â
You hugged your arms around yourself, gaze dropping to the ground. Your teeth worried at your bottom lip, hesitation written into every line of your postureâlike you were trying to decide whether this was another trick, another trap meant to corner you again.
Suguru didnât push. He just waited, didnât rush you. Eventually, after a long pause, you gave a small, uncertain nod.
Relief washed over him, tempered by something bitter and heavy. He stayed where he was as you took a wide path around himâand an even wider one around Satoruânever lifting your eyes as you climbed into the car. Only when it disappeared from view did he pull out his phone and send a short text. No explanation, just a demand for someone to come pick them upâhe wanted to get back to the campus fast.
Then he turned back to Satoru. His footsteps hit the ground harder than necessary as he stalked toward him, heels digging in with every step.
âCare to explain what the fuck you were thinking?â
Satoru only shrugged. It was infuriating how easily his smugness slid back into placeâas if nothing had happened, as if he had nothing to answer for.
âOh, donât look at me like that,â Satoru said lightly, rolling his eyes as if this were all some obvious joke Suguru was just too slow to understand. âYouâre acting all moral, Suguru. . . I didnât know you could be such a gentleman when you wanted.â His smile sharpened. âBut we both know the truth. Youâre not actually angry.â
Suguru exhaled sharply.
âYouâre just jealous you didnât get to her before me.â
The muscle in Suguruâs jaw ticked. His fists clenched at his sides. Being friends with someone who could read you like a book had its advantages. This was not one of them.
âBut hey,â Satoru continued, entirely unbothered, hooking two fingers into the collar of his jacket and tugging it up as if presenting evidence, âyou know me. Iâm not greedy. I know how to share.â
Suguru was on the verge of punching him.
âGo on. Take a whiffââ Satoru brought the fabric slowly to his nose. ââso sweet.â
Suguru didnât move, didnât even dare to breathe. He knew if he did, this would turn into something neither of them could walk back from.
Satoru seemed to sense the tension. His gaze flicked over Suguruâs expression. Then he shrugged, slipping out of the jacket and tossing it over.
Suguru caught it without thinking. His grip tightened instantly, knuckles whitening as he stared at Satoru. After a beat, he lifted the fabric to his face and inhaled deeplyâonce. Twice. On the third breath, he held it, refusing to exhale until his lungs burned, until the air inside him was replaced with your scent.
Satoru only grinned as he watched his friend accept the peace offering.
âYou can keep it.â
â§ â§ â§
When they returned to campus, they barely had time to step out of the car before Yaga intercepted them.
He stood at the edge of the lot, arms folded across his chest, posture relaxed in a way Suguru had long learned not to trust. His eyes swept over them once.
âAnything to share?â Yaga asked as he approached.
His tone was flat, but there was weight behind it. A hook baited and waiting.
âNope,â Satoru answered immediately, rocking back on his heels. âMission cleared. Real boring stuff.â
Yagaâs gaze shiftedânot to Suguruâs face, but to his hands, to the jacket he still refused to let go of.
âThen why,â Yaga asked, far too calmly, âdid two separate cars bring you back?â
Suguru exhaled through his nose, tipping his head back with an exaggerated sigh. âWhy ask,â he said, âwhen you already know the answer?â This was a bluffâa dangerous one, but he didnât want to say anything that would land either of them in trouble.
âSo itâs true, then?â Yaga pressed. âWhat she said?â
Satoru let out a soft laugh, clearly unableâor unwillingâto keep his mouth shut.
âOh?â he said, eyebrows shooting up. âWhat did the little omega say?â
There was a long pause.
âThat she exhausted herself,â Yaga replied slowly, eyes flicking between the two of them. He waited, expecting either of them to slip up or offer a different version of the story, because he knew there was more to it. But neither young alpha cracked under the pressure. âAnd asked Suguru to call another car because she couldnât maintain her barrier. She didnât think it was wise for you all to return together.â
Suguru hadnât even considered the possibility that you might lie about what had happened, but in that moment, he didnât have time to wonder why you might have.
âYeah,â Satoru said lightly, a faint grin still on his face. âPoor thingââ
âBut she did well,â Suguru cut in sharply. âHandled herself. Cleared her floor. Didnât even need our help.â
A muffled sound escaped Satoru.
Suguru shot him a warning glare.
Yagaâs expression didnât change, but something unreadable flickered in his eyes. He opened his mouth, clearly intending to ask more questionsâ
âExcuse us,â Suguru said abruptly.
His hand shot out, clamping onto Satoruâs collar with enough force to crease the fabric. Without hesitation, he yanked him backward and started dragging him out of sight.
Satoru choked on a laugh as he stumbled along, barely catching his footing as they rounded the corner and Yaga vanished was out of view.
⯠a/n: I'm thinking of creating a proper masterlist specifically for this fic that includes a taglist, so if you want to be tagged in any of the future chapter, let me know :)
!Ryomen Sukuna; who falls in love with the concubine he hated the most
Every woman brought to his estate understood the rules of survival before they even crossed the threshold.
You bowed until your forehead touched the tatami. You spoke only when spoken to. You anticipated his moods, read the terrifying language of his four eyes, and offered flattery or tears depending on what type of amusement he was seeking that day.
To center your entire existence around Ryomen Sukuna was the only way to ensure your head remained attached to your shoulders.
Except you didn't.
You hadn't knelt when he first entered your quarters three months ago. You had been lying on your side, propped up on an elbow, reading a translated scroll from the northern provinces, and you had merely shifted your gaze to look at him, entirely unimpressed by the sudden, heavy drop in atmospheric pressure that usually accompanied his presence.
"Stand when I enter," he had commanded, his upper eyes narrowing into dangerous, ruby slits.
You had turned a page. "Then leave and enter again. Perhaps I will feel like it next time."
You hadn't scrambled to fix your posture. You had just looked at him with an expression of profound boredom.
The attendants behind him had turned white as ghosts, bracing for the inevitable spray of blood. Sukunaâs jaw had set, a terrifying, low growl vibrating from his chest. But you hadn't trembled.
If he wanted to kill you, he would kill you. Fawning over him wasn't going to change his nature, so you simply refused to waste the energy.
He hadn't killed you. Instead, he had left, the doors slamming shut with enough force to rattle the shoji screens.
And that was the exact moment the nightmare began. Because from that night onward, Sukuna became an insufferable, permanent fixture in your life.
"You are eating that wrong."
You stopped your chopsticks halfway to your mouth, letting out a long, slow exhale through your nose. It was midnight.
You had been looking forward to a quiet, solitary meal of cold rice and pickled plums, but Sukuna had simply materialized in the corner of your room ten minutes ago, dripping wet from a thunderstorm, and had proceeded to sit directly on the edge of your bedding.
"I am eating it the way I have eaten it for more than twenty years," you said, not looking at him. "If my technique offends you, the door is exactly where you left it."
Sukuna scoffed, leaning back on his palms. His massive, tattooed frame took up half the space in your small room, his lower arms crossed over his chest while his upper right hand casually reached over and swiped a plum straight from your bowl.
"You have a wretched attitude," he remarked, popping the fruit into his mouth and chewing lazily. "The women in the east hall weep with gratitude if I so much as glance toward their courtyard. You look at me like I am a stray dog that ruined your garden."
"Stray dogs are quieter," you muttered, finally looking up to glare at him. "And they don't steal my food."
Sukunaâs lower mouth twitched into a sharp, jagged grin. He loved it. The realization turned your stomach, a strange, dizzying mixture of irritation and heat.
He didn't come to your room because he wanted a concubine; he came because he was a creature driven entirely by conflict, and you were the only person in the entire empire who refused to give him the satisfaction of a fight. You gave him nothing. You gave him a wall of pure, unbothered apathy, and it was driving him entirely insane.
He leaned forward suddenly, crowding your space. The smell of the storm, ozone and rain, rushed over you. Before you could pull back, his large, calloused hand shot out, his fingers wrapping around your jaw.
It wasn't the brutal, bone-crushing grip he used on his enemies. It was controlled, a heavy, unyielding restraint that forced your face up toward his.
"You should fear me," he murmured, his upper eyes tracking the movement of your throat as you swallowed. His thumb thumbed the soft skin right beneath your lower lip, a deliberate, electric friction that made your toes curl inside your robes. "A single flick of my finger, and this pretty little throat splits wide open."
You met his gaze evenly, refusing to let the wild, frantic thudding of your heart show on your face. "Then do it. I'm tired of your bragging."
Sukuna froze. For a second, the silence in the room was deadly. Then, a loud, booming laugh tore from his throat, the sound rough and genuine as he released your jaw, shifting his weight until he was practically draped over your lap, his heavy head resting casually against your thigh.
"Insufferable," he muttered, closing all four of his eyes as if he owned the space. "Utterly insufferable."
You stared down at the King of Curses currently using your legs as a pillow, your hand hovering over his unruly pink hair, entirely tempted to shove him off. But you didn't. You just sighed, picking up your chopsticks again, ignoring the way his subconscious weight felt entirely too natural against you.
The shift happened. In Sukunaâs dictionary, words like love or devotion were meaningless concepts invented by the weak to justify their dependency. He would never admit to favoring you. If anyone asked, he would simply say you were a minor amusement, a dull distraction from his boredom.
But the rest of the estate wasn't blind.
The servants noticed that the rare silks brought from the western raids, the ones Sukuna usually threw into the treasury to rotâsomehow kept finding their way into your wardrobe because he had casually grumbled that your current robes looked "like rags."
The guards noticed that if Sukuna left your courtyard irritated, he was significantly less likely to execute someone in the main hall.
And then there was the incident with the lord of the northern clans.
During a formal banquet, the lord had made a passing, disparaging remark about your status, calling you an "eccentric, useless mouth to feed" who didn't know her place.
You hadn't even heard the comment; you had been across the pavilion, systematically ignoring Sukunaâs attempts to make you try a cup of sake.
But Sukuna had heard it.
He hadn't made a scene. He had simply stood up, walked over to the lordâs table, and dismantled the manâs entire lineage within three seconds, leaving the pavilion drenched in red before sitting back down next to you, casually picking up his chopsticks as if nothing had happened.
"You're exhausting when you're angry," you had murmured, wiping a stray drop of blood from the sleeve of your robe with a click of your tongue.
Sukuna hadn't answered. He had just grabbed your wrist, pulling your hand toward him until you were forced to use your sleeve to wipe a smudge of gore from his cheek instead. He hadn't asked. He had just assumed your hands belonged on his skin.
Late one evening, weeks later, the heat of the summer had turned the air thick and oppressive. You were lying awake in your bed, staring at the ceiling, when the shoji screen slid open without a sound.
Sukuna stepped inside. He looked exhausted, the heavy marks of a curse battle still lingering in the tension of his shoulders. He didn't speak. He just shed his heavy outer robe, letting it hit the floor, before crawling directly onto your sleeping mat.
"Go away," you groaned, trying to roll over to the far edge. "It is too hot for this."
"Silence," he grunted, a large, heavy arm snaking around your waist from behind. He hauled you back against his chest with a single, effortless tug, his massive body completely enveloping yours.
His chest was blazing hot, a furnace of pure cursed energy, and his face buried itself directly into the crook of your neck.
"You cling too much," you muttered, though you didn't actually fight the hold. It was a useless endeavor anyway.
"What nonsense," Sukuna rumbled, his voice thick with sleep, his lower arms tightening around your hips, anchoring you so securely to him that you could feel the rhythmic, heavy thud of his heart against your spine. "You are small. You fit here. Stop complaining."
You lay there in the dark, his breath warm against your skin, his long, sharp fingernails absentmindedly tracing patterns into the fabric of your garment near your ribs.
He was completely unaware of how intimate the gesture was, how entirely possessive his body became the moment he was near you. He thought he was just resting. He thought he was just taking what was his.
You turned your head slightly, looking back at him. His eyes were closed, his expression unusually peaceful in the dim moonlight.
"You're an idiot, Ryomen Sukuna," you whispered softly.
A faint, arrogant smirk touched his lips, though he didn't open his eyes. His hand moved up, his fingers lacing through yours with a casual, unthinking pressure, locking your hands together against the bedding.
"And you are still breathing," he murmured into your skin, his grip tightening just a fraction more. "Be grateful I find your stupidity so entertaining."
You closed your eyes, letting yourself sink into his terrifying, inescapable warmth, finally accepting that while the King of Curses would never say the words, his actions had already rewritten the entire world around you.
OR alpha!gojo and alpha!geto are clearly interestedâborderline obsessedâbut youâre not about to give in that easily, duh
⯠masterlist â previous chapter | next chapter
⯠pairing: gojo/reader/geto
⯠content: +18, omegaverse, not canon compliant, canon typical violence, love triangle, pining, forced proximity, reader (omega) is a sorcercer, toxic vibes, plenty of angst and fluff, eventual smut. . .
⯠a/n: the story feels familiar? it may be.
CHAPTER ONE.
âAre you really an alpha,â you shot back, âor just annoying like that?â
Transferring from Kyoto to Tokyo in your third year was never something you had imagined for yourselfâcertainly not something you wanted to do.
As the train rattled forward, your gaze remained fixed on the rain-streaked window, though you barely registered the scenery rushing past. The world outside was a watercolor of gray skies and blurred silhouettes, washed together by the relentless drizzle. It was early morning, yet the clouds hung low and heavy, smothering the horizon.
You watched a pair of raindrops race down the glass.
At first they zigzagged separately, weaving around one another. One seemed to gain speed, slipping lower while the other lagged behind. Then a third joined them, spiraling into their path. The three droplets twisted and collided, trying to avoid one another before finally merging into a single stream that disappeared over the edge of the window.
You sighed and the moment your attention drifted from the glass, settling on your lap, thoughts you had been trying to ignore all morning returned; no matter how many times you shoved them aside, they crept back in like poisonous ivy, winding through every corner of your mind and sinking their roots deeper.
In hindsight, you should have noticed something was happening a month ago. The signs had been there: the hushed conversations that stopped when you approached, the strange looks, and the sudden increase in assignments, training exercises, and missions. At the time, you'd assumed your teachers were simply pushing you harder. Eventually, you realized it was a testâand you passed.
The transfer notice arrived without ceremony. Not as a discussion, not as a requestâa statement.
You were being transferred to Tokyo Jujutsu High.
You had only recently begun to think of Kyoto as home. The idea of leaving behind everything familiar twisted uncomfortably inside your chest. Yet arguing would have accomplished nothing. Orders like this came from people whose authority dwarfed your own. So, you hadn't protested and just tried to accept it.
You weren't in a position to demand explanations.
You certainly weren't in a position to refuse.
Either way, you kept reminding yourself, there were only two years left; twenty-four months.
You repeated the number like a mantra.
You could survive twenty-four months.
Adjusting would be difficult at first. Everything would be unfamiliarâthe campus, the city, the people. Eventually, though, routine would settle in. Missions would pile up. Assignments would demand your attention.
Time would pass.
You were already halfway through your education. You hadn't come this far just to quit now, and quitting would have been the only way to avoid the transfer. That wasn't an option.
You intended to graduate.
You intended to become a full-fledged jujutsu sorcerer.
This transfer was nothing more than another obstacle standing between you and that goal.
At least, that was what you kept telling yourself.
You had never actually visited Tokyo Jujutsu High before, but you knew enough about it. That was unavoidable when you attended its sister school.
Despite serving the same purpose, Kyoto and Tokyo operated very differently. While Kyoto primarily trained omegas, Tokyo was known for its alpha students. Betas could attend either institution and often acted as a bridge between the two groups, though most eventually enrolled in Kyoto.
The separation wasn't tradition. It wasn't some outdated custom preserved out of habit. It was controlâa deliberate system designed to force young sorcerers to prioritize discipline over instinct.
Personally, you preferred it that way.
The thought of spending your formative years surrounded by alpha pheromones and oversized egos sounded like a special kind of torture. Young alphas, in particular, had a tendency to carry themselves as though the world naturally revolved around them.
Unlike civilians, jujutsu sorcerers couldn't rely on suppressants, scent blockers, or other pharmaceutical shortcuts. Anything that interfered with instincts also interfered with cursed energy output, and a sorcerer with capped energy was a liability.
If you hadn't possessed an innate technique, you might have fought the transfer harder.
Being an omega in an alpha-dominated environment sounded reckless on paper. Dangerous at worst. Especially when many students were still learning how to manage themselves.
But you did have an innate technique. That fact alone kept panic from consuming you entirely. Because it meant you weren't completely defenseless.
Your technique allowed you to create vacuum-like barriersâisolated spaces that severed outside influence and immobilized anything trapped within them.
On missions, you used it to restrain curses before exorcising them from a safe distance with a cursed tool.
Off the battlefield, however, it served a very different purpose. You could weave a thin barrier around your body. Almost invisible. A second skin made of cursed energy. It muted everything: your scent, your pheromones, and even the presence of your cursed energy.
Maintaining it for extended periods was exhausting. After receiving news of the transfer, however, you had thrown yourself into mastering it. The improvement had been significant. A month ago, you could barely sustain the barrier for a few hours before exhaustion forced it to collapse. Now, with enough concentration, you could maintain it for nearly an entire day. An achievement you should have been proud of. Instead, it only reminded you that soon you would need to maintain it constantly.
The thought made your shoulders sag.
Outside, another raindrop struck the window. Then another. Then another.
Tokyo drew closer with every passing mile, looming ahead like a storm waiting patiently on the horizon.
â§ â§ â§
The rest of the journey passed in a haze of half-sleep and drifting thoughts.
You dozed with your cheek pressed against the cool glass, waking intermittently as the train jolted over uneven tracks. Time blurred. Somewhere between stations, you ate the food you had packedâmechanically, without much tasteâand drank from a can of something overly sweet and carbonated.
When you reached into your bag later and found a small bar of strawberry chocolate, you paused.
Utahime.
The realization softened something in your chest.
A folded note was tucked beneath the wrapper.
Call me when you get there <3
You stared at it for a moment longer than you meant to, then carefully slipped it into your pocket instead of throwing it away.
By the time the train finally pulled into Tokyo, your nerves felt frayed raw.
The station itself was overwhelming in a way you hadn't anticipatedânot loud exactly, but dense. Too many people. Too many scents. Too much motion.
The drive from the station took longer than expected, and with every kilometer the knot in your chest tightened. You found yourself fidgeting without realizing itâpicking at loose threads on your sleeve, tapping your fingers against your thigh, checking the time three separate times despite knowing only a few minutes had passed.
You told yourself you weren't nervous. That you had no reason to be. And yet your instincts disagreed.
Tokyo Jujutsu High appeared quietly, tucked away from the city in a way that made it feel almost unreal. Like it hadn't quite decided whether it belonged to the modern world or something older.
A staff member greeted you briefly. No ceremony. No fanfare. Just a nod and a direction. You followed.
The dormitory building was larger than Kyotoâs, though emptier in feeling. The halls stretched longer. The air smelled faintly of wood and cleaning oil.
You were shown to your floor. Only a few students lived there. A mix of betas and one other omega, you were told in passing.
Your new room itself was simple.
A bed with a nightstand. A desk and a chair whose wheels squeaked when you sat down. A wardrobe. Two sets of summer and winter uniforms.
After changing into dark blue, high-waisted slacks and a cropped jacket with a high collar, you decided it was time for a snack.
Maintaining your barrier already felt like holding something alive beneath your skinâconstant, hungry, draining. The moment you stepped off the train, you'd reactivated it fully. Now it clung to you like a second pulse, steady but demanding.
You left your room.
The hallway was quiet. Almost suspiciously so. You passed the empty common area without incident, and soon you found yourself outside. The campus grounds here were far larger than Kyotoâsâwide paths branching between buildings, unfamiliar turns everywhere you looked.
You wandered longer than you intended.
Eventually, you found the vending machines.
Someone was already there.
You stopped. Not because they noticed you, but because your body reacted first. You were about to turn around and leave when your mind caught up and halted you.
A girl stood in front of the machine, studying the options with mild concentration. She was your height, maybe slightly shorter, with short brown hair that brushed her jaw. Her uniform was similar to yours, though instead of slacks she wore a skirt and tights.
You continued to linger several steps away when the sudden realization loosened something in your chest you hadn't realized was tight.
She was a beta.
You knew because there was no instinctive alarm. You didn't feel the urge to retreat. You felt awkward, but.. at ease.
She selected a drink and stepped aside. Only then did she notice youâor perhaps she simply acknowledged your presence. Her gaze flicked over you briefly.
âYouâre new,â she said.
It wasn't a question.
âYeah,â you replied because it seemed like a polite thing to do.
She didn't seem particularly interested beyond that.
You bought two things: something aggressively pink and a bag of sour worms.
The silence that settled between you wasn't uncomfortable. It simply existed. However, since she wasn't walking away, you decided to introduce yourself.
âIeiri Shoko,â the girl replied, cracking open her can.
âOh.â You glanced toward her; her name sounded familiar. âWe're roommates. Sort of.â
âFigured.â The corners of her mouth twitched, though it never quite turned into a smile.
Somehow, you didnât rush back to your room like you had planned after you acquired your snacks. You stayed and talked with Ieiri, even if the conversation moved at a snailâs pace. Maybe it was because you didn't feel threatened or maybe because every time you thought about leaving, she would casually say something that reeled you back into the conversation.
Ieiri told you she didnât think there was much difference between Kyoto and Tokyo when it came to classes or training after you mentioned being worried about adjusting to Tokyo.
You offered her your sweets; she took two worms. In return, she pulled out a pack of cigarettes, slipped one between her lips, and silently offered you one as well.
You werenât really a smoker. Youâd tried once or twice just for the sake of it, but the habit never stuck. Still, you took one. Maybe it would calm your nerves. And unlike in the past, the idea of smelling like tobacco didnât seem as unappealing. If anything, it might help mask your already muted omega scent even further, in case your barrier flickered if you focused lessened, or worse collapsed competely.
âSo,â she started, passing you the lighterâyou made sure not to touch her hand, avoiding questions about the barrier coating your skin, âwhy transfer here?â
You shrugged, lighting the cigarette and inhaling. The smoke filled your lungs, strangely comforting. To your relief, the cough you expected didnt came, but it still took a few small inhales before you adjusted to the taste.
âNot really my choice,â you said, exhaling slowly, watching the smoke curl in the air.
âNo?â
âI was told to come. . . I only have two years left anyway.â
Ieiri hummed softly, as if filing the information away rather than judging it.
More than once, you caught her watching youânot in a way that felt invasive, but observant. Noting things without commenting on them.
When your fingers lowered and the ash from your cigarette fell cleanly to the ground without touching you, her gaze lingered for a fraction longer.
â§ â§ â§
Together, you spent another hour outside.
One cigarette became two.The conversation came in piecesâshort remarks, pauses, the occasional comment that didn't require a response.
The breeze moved through the courtyard, carrying the scent of damp earth and distant rain.
Eventually, you both headed back inside and into the classroom.
The moment you stepped inside, it hit you.
The scentâoverwhelming. The air felt thick enough to chew. Alpha pheromones saturated every corner of the room, seeped into the desks, clung to the walls like smoke trapped beneath a ceiling. Your technique dulled the worst of it, filtering the scents through layers of cursed energy, but it didn't erase it.
You stepped to the nearest window and pushed it open without hesitation. Fresh air flooded inside. Only then did you notice the room properly.
Four desks near the front. A chalkboard with faint remnants of writing. Someone had drawn something crude in the cornerâhalf erased. Another attempt at writing had been scratched out, leaving only a fragment: YagaâŚ
You sat down. Shoko took the desk beside yours. Conversation resumed easily between the two of you. Something about the city. Something about training. Something about nothing in particular. You listened more than you spoke.
The classroom door slid open. Your attention snapped toward it immediately, eyes narrowing as if you were assessing a threat, which in a way you were.
Gojo Satoru entered like he owned the room. His scent pressed forward even through your barrier. Sharp and electric, demanding attention whether you wanted to give it or not. His white hair stuck out in every direction, dark sunglasses perched on his nose. A bright pink lollipop rested between his lips, which he pulled out to twirl between his fingers, as his eyes lazily scanned the classroom.
Your body tensed, shoulders drawing inwards before you could stop yourself as his gaze stopped directly at you, the smirk widening as if he found what he was looking fo.r
Another figure followed behind him.
Where Gojoâs presence crashed into the room, this one settled. Heavy. Controlled. His friend's scent stayed coiled close to his body, contained but unmistakable. Hands in his pockets, shoulders relaxed, hair tied back in a messy bun. His gaze was just as curious as Gojoâs, though far more restrained.
âYouâre both uncharacteristically early today,â Ieiri commented as they dropped into the empty chairs behind you and her. Like she, you turned slightly to the side so you could look at the two of them.
âAre we?â Gojo leaned forward, elbows on his desk, chin resting on his knuckles as he popped the lollipop back into his mouth. Despite the sunglasses shielding his eyes, you noticed them flick briefly to Ieiri before settling back on you.
You didn't like the attention, but you refrained from commenting or from saying anything at all.
âYouâre usually late,â Ieiri said flatly.
âThatâs slander.â
âYesterday you were thirty minutes late.â
âI was busy. . . sleeping.â Gojo shrugged, twirling his lollipop.
His friend exhaled something that might have been a laugh. Ieiri rolled her eyes and made a disguisted expression.
âAaaand usually I don't have the motivation to show up,â Gojo admitted shamelessly. âEspecially for Yaga's booooring classes.â
Gojo, still looking at you, held out the lollipop, lips curling into a wolfish smirk.
âWant some?â
You shook your head and leaned back slightly, increasing the space between you. Your barrier tightened instinctively, as you spared a brief glance at his friendâwho still hadnât spokenâbut like Gojo, he was watching you now. Even Ieiri's eyes were on you now.
The attention made your skin crawl.
The candy disappeared back into his mouth.
âNot the chatty type, huh,â Gojo mused, content to talk to himself as he leaned back, legs stretched out beneath the desk, one hand resting on his knee, fingers drumming.
âDonât pay attention to him,â Ieiri sighed, thankfully redirecting the conversation after a moment when she clearly saw your shoulders tensing, your spine locking straight. âAny trouble yesterday?â
âNone. Obviously,â the other alpha replied, sighing and sinking even lower in his seat before straightening back up. âThough, I wouldâve finished earlier if someone hadnât been messing around.â
âI was not messing around,â Gojo scoffed dramatically, pretending to be offended.
Ieiri raised her eyebrows, obviously not believing him.
âAnyway,â Gojo turned back to you, determined to continue where he had been interrupted. âDo you have a name?â
You didnât reply, only because he was too quick with yet another comment; however, this time he glanced at Ieiri.
âIs she mute or something? Havenât heard her say a word yet.â
âIâm not,â you snapped, irritation slipping into your voice because you hated when people talked about you like you werenât in the room. Despite everything youâd heard about Gojo Satoruâthe prodigy, the strongest, multiple other praisesâall you could think about right now was that he was loud. Too animated. Took up too much space. Completely incapable of shutting up and definitely fucking annoying.
âWell, then what is it? Your name?â he pressed, but before you could even open your mouth, he continued, yet again interrupting you before you could even part your lips. âNoâwait, Iâll guess.â
You let him get through six increasingly ridiculous guesses. By the seventh, you cut him off and introduced yourself, giving only your first name.
âOhhh, weâre on a first-name basis already? I like that,â his grin widened as he dipped his chin, sunglasses sliding down just enough to reveal a sliver of pale lashes and a hint of ridiculously blue eyes. âObviously, you already know who I am.â
You scrunched your nose, briefly considering lying just to fuck with him, but decided against it, realizing that it would only spur him onâand he was already too much to deal with.
âAnd this is Geto,â Gojo added, pointing the lollipop at his friend. âThough I know heâd love it if you called him Suguru.â
Geto didnât argue.
âYou have too much energy this early in the morning,â Ieiri muttered, rubbing her temples before sinking in her seat, leaning all her weight on the back of her chair.
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â Gojo tilted his head, a few strands of white hair falling into his face as he pouted, bottom lip jutting out.
âShe means youâre talking too much,â Geto clarified.
You snorted before you could stop yourself, quickly swallowing the sound and forcing your expression back to blank. The corner of Getoâs lips twitched as your eyes locked for a moment.
Unlike Ieiri, or even Geto, who only occasionally made a comment as the conversation continuedâwell, it was more of a monologue from GojoâGojo obviously had no concept of boundaries. And despite Ieiriâs attempts to redirect attention away from you, whenever she noticed you shifting in your chair, the empty packet crinkling between your fingers as you tried to avoid a question, or when you outright glared at Gojo, he didnât ease up.
âAre you really an omega?â he asked.
The room stilled.
Geto straightened, his attention sharpening. Even Ieiri froze, waiting for the answer to one of the questions she hadnât dared ask back at the vending machines.
You knew what prompted the questionâthe absence, the wrongness of it. Your scent should have been obvious, should have soaked into the room. Instead, there was nothing, contained, suppressed, locked behind cursed energy, which was becoming harder to maintain considering your emotions were all over the place.
âAre you really an alpha,â you shot back, âor just annoying like that?â
Gojo burst out laughing. Geto exhaled sharply; it almost sounded like a low chuckle. Even Ieiriâs lips twitched.
Leaning forward again, Gojo inhaled deliberately, unconcerned with subtlety. His gaze traveled down your frame as if looking for something.
Your pulse spiked. The barrier strained but remained intact. You pressed yourself into your seat, chair legs scraping faintly as it slid an inch backward. Your arms instinctively wrapped around your waist.
You didnât know why you were avoiding the answer. You thought about pretending to be a beta back on the train, but that thought was quickly dismissed. You were not nearly strong enough to keep the charade up, and the idea of maintaining your barrier all the time for two years straight sounded exhausting. Still, you neither confirmed nor denied it. It was bound that the truth about you being omega would eventually become known to everyone, but you wanted to keep that a secret for as long as you couldâeven if it was just another five minutes.
âBoundaries, Satoru,â Ieiri snapped, tossing her empty can at his shoulder.
Gojoâs infinity made it bounce off him. It rolled across the floor toward Getoâs desk, and he picked it up before tossing it into the bin near the door.
Gojo only slumped back in his chair when you gave him the answer he wantedâa clipped, quiet, thoroughly annoyed yes that made him smirk. And you only said it because he was clearly intent on glaring holes into your head until you caved and finally admitted it; it was the only way to maybe get rid of his attention and the scrutinizing gaze.
Before he could ask another question you didnât want to answer, Yaga Masamichi walked in.
â§ â§ â§
The class started. Time dragged. Gojo remained loud throughout all of it. There wasnât a stretch longer than five minutes without some running commentary, a complaint, or an observation nobody had asked for.
When Yaga finally dismissed everyone, relief unfurled inside your chest. Only for him to ask you to stay behind. Back in Kyoto, one-on-one conversations with your teacher had rarely meant anything good. Usually, they ended with criticism, additional assignments, or some variation of you need to do better. This time, however, you didnât mind.
Staying behind meant not having to walk out into the hallway and risk Gojo picking up exactly where heâd left off.
The conversation itself was brief and largely inconsequential. Yaga asked a few questions. You gave neutral answers.
The only moment that caught you off guard came right before he dismissed you.
âYou handled yourself well.â
When confusion washed over your face, he elaborated.
âUsing your innate technique to shield yourself was smart.â
The praise settled awkwardly in your chest, unfamiliar enough that you didnât know where to put it.
By the time you left the classroom, Yaga had already turned his attention back to paperwork.
That afternoon, you secluded yourself in your room after raiding the vending machines yet again, this time coming back with a bigger haul. Despite knowing better, you skipped lunch, needing a moment to yourself. By the time dinner rolled around, however, you knew you couldnât avoid the cafeteria any longer.
To your surprise, you only found Ieiri and Geto there, the space otherwise empty. After grabbing your food, you carried your tray over and sat down with them.
âYou skipped lunch today,â Geto remarked, tone casual, matter-of-fact.
âNeeded a nap more than food,â you replied, a lie that came easily because it was already on the tip of your tongue.
Though Gojoâs presence was not missed in the slightest, you still noticed his absence, and as much as you didnât want to ask, the question slipped out anyway. You reasoned with yourself that you needed to know where he was if you wanted to continue avoiding him.
âWhereâs Gojo?â
A smirk tugged at Getoâs mouth. âMiss him already?â
You kept your eyes firmly on your tray.
âNo,â you said dryly, continuing to push food around instead of eating. âI just want to know who to thank for keeping him busy.â
Ieiri snorted. You shot her a glance, a satisfied smile flickering across your lips before it fadedâbecause the way you kept exchanging glances over the meal reminded you too much of Utahime, who you missed despite seeing her yesterday.
You definitely should call her later tonight.
âYaga,â Geto answered. âSatoru forgot to put up a curtain during a mission. Again. Heâs on cleaning duty. Scrubbing floors.â
âAnd is he really? Scrubbing floors?â you asked, rolling your eyes. There was no chance Gojo Satoru was using a broom for its intended purpose.
Getoâs chuckle rumbled low in his chest. âProbably not.â
Neither Geto nor Ieiri rushed you, waiting until youâd finished before standing. When the three of you stepped outside, Ieiri immediately reached into her pocket.
âA cigarette after a meal is mandatory.â
The evening air was cool, though the wind wasnât harsh, even less so with your barrier upâonly a slight breeze.
âDidnât peg you as a smoker,â Geto commented as Ieiri pulled out two sticks and handed one to you.
âOccasionally,â you said with a shrug, though you had a strange feeling the habit might stick.
As Ieiri lit her cigarette, Geto flicked his lighter open. One hand shielded the flame from the breeze as he tipped his chin toward you. You leaned in without taking the lighter. Your muscles tensed when he leaned closer as well, the tips of your cigarettes brushing briefly as the flame caught.
Your gaze lifted. Your body froze. Up close, his eyes werenât black like youâd thought earlier. They were a deep, dark shade of purple.
He tilted his head slightly, not pulling away when he realized you were looking at him. His bangs slipped to the side, eyes narrowing as if he noticed something interesting, though he said nothing. Neither did you, as if hypnotized.
When Geto still didnât move, you forced yourself to step back instead. Straightening, you inhaled a long drag and deliberately ignored the way Ieiri was watching the two of you.
â§ â§ â§
The rest of the week was. . . a lot. You expected chaos, but it went beyond that, leaving you quietly questioning whether you could really endure the next two years like this.
Tuesday proved that Monday hadn't been a fluke.
Gojo was just as overbearing, just as relentless, and somehow even more irritating than before. His attention remained fixed on you no matter how thoroughly you demonstrated your complete lack of interest in entertaining him. It was like being stalked by an especially loud stray catâone that never got tired, one that talked constantly.
Geto was quieter. Far quieter. Yet somehow, you were always aware of him. Youâd catch him watching from across the classroom, listening whenever you spoke to Ieiri, leaning toward Gojo to whisper something whenever Yagaâs back was turned. You never managed to hear what was being said.
The fact that you wanted to know bothered you more than the fact that it was happening.
Thankfully, you had Ieiri. You found yourself sticking close to her throughout the week, and to your relief, she seemed to enjoy your company as much as you enjoyed hers.
Wednesday offered some relief during training when you and Ieiri were paired for hand-to-hand combat. You were stronger with your technique than she was, but she didnât seem bothered by itâespecially not when the two of you managed to sneak away for a few smoke breaks while Yaga focused his full attention on chewing out Gojo and Geto, who were doing everything but practicing the drills they needed to do.
Thursday was the worst. Although you didnât see Gojo or Getoâthey were away on a mission, as Ieiri told you when the two of you ate breakfastâYaga summoned you and informed you that you would be sent out on a mission the following day.
Initially, you were excited. Despite how tough some missions could be, it was always a chance to improve, and you were determined to become the best damn sorcerer you could be.
âThis will be your first mission here in Tokyo,â he said. âNothing overly difficult.â
You nodded, standing in front of his desk, hands loosely clasped behind your back as you tried not to fidget too much.
âA public high school,â Yaga continued, sliding a thin file across the desk. âGrade Four curses.â
You stepped forward to glance at the paperwork. The relief was immediate. Grade Four meant nuisance-levelâtedious, perhaps, but not dangerous. Basically a perfect first mission for you in Tokyo.
âAs a Grade Two sorcerer,â Yaga went on, âyouâre more than capable of handling this. Howeverââ
Your stomach dropped, immediatly knowing you were not going to like what he said next.
ââthe infestation is widespread. Multiple classrooms, hallways, and a basement. This means working alone would be inefficient.â
You clasped your hands behind your back again, nails digging into your palms.
Yaga suddenly leaned back in his seat and studied you longer than necessary. His gaze dropped to your posture, then the faint hum of cursed energy beneath your skin.
âYou are still maintaining your technique,â he observed, abruptly changing the topic.
âYes.â
âConstantly?â
You hesitated, not sure if you should be honest, but decided there was no point in lying. âI only drop it when Iâm alone.â
Yaga nodded once. âSmart. But costly.â
You didnât deny it, muttering something about it being manageable as long as you kept fueling your body and didnât skip meals. He offered no comment, smoothly redirecting the conversation back to the mission.
âGojo and Geto will accompany you.â
Your chest tightened, but you forced your expression to remain neutral. Youâd only maintained your barrier on a mission a handful of times before, but being partnered with them meant youâd have to do it again. You wondered why you couldnât be paired up with someone else, literally anyone else. . . but just like always, you refused to backtalk your teacher.
After a pause, Yaga added, âThe school has three floors. It would be wise to split up.â Another pause, like he was expecting you to say something, like he expected a student to complain or fight about it. âBut if at any point maintaining your barrier compromises your performance,â his voice hardened, âyou do not drop it. You pull back instead and leave the rest to Gojo and Geto. Understood?â
âUnderstood.â
âFor future missions,â Yaga continued, âIâll try to pair you with a beta or send you solo when appropriate.â
The thought of being alone with Gojo and Getoâespecially Gojo, who so openly ignored your boundaries and seemed to take pleasure in provoking youâmade your stomach twist.
For the past week, Ieiri had been a bufferâa friend when the four of you were together, and a beta between omega and the two alphas.
Tomorrow, there would be nothing between you.
You knew, without a doubt, that the mission would not go smoothly, no matter how easy it seemed on paper. The curses might be low-grade, but Gojo and Geto were a special-grade nuisance of their ownâespecially the annoying white-haired idiotâand you werenât sure you could handle either of them.