no one likes hard-boiled eggs. in fact, they're one of the least liked ways to make an egg. unlike its beloved counterpart, the delicious soft-boiled egg, no one would ever claim the gray-green, pasty yolk with a rubbery white as their favourite. unfortunately in this story, you are one such hard-boiled egg.
in which you gets isekaied into your favourite virtual dating sim... as the villainess!
genre: various!blue lock boys x f!reader, high school au, dating sim au, enemies to friends to lovers
- isagi, bachira, rin, nagi, reo, chigiri, sae
warnings: bullying, angsty, swearing, ooc characters, possible mentions of death and s/icide? will get updated as the series goes on with individual warnings in the chapters; please keep an eye out!
taglist: open!
status: ongoing! - currently on short hiatus to plan!
(last updated 03/15)
prologue
introductions: can't a girl graduate in peace?
chapter 1: rotted ceiling, pretty house
chapter 2: give me a break...
chapter 3: friend or foe
chapter 4: stars in the sky, stars in the sea
chapter 5: heart problems
chapter 6: coming soon!
divider by @pixopix
an: if u can't already tell this is inspired by the manhwa "villains are destined to die / death is the only ending for the villainess" hehe! i love it sm, go check it out if u don't already read it! however, i do plan to keep things pretty different other than general enemies to friends plotline. i hope u enjoy! lmk if u want to be added or taken off the taglist anytime!
Tw: smut, sub!mark but also dom?? (switch ig), he’s down bad for you, you go at it from dusk till dawn, he wants you so bad, you can’t resist his puppy dog eyes.
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It’s been months. You can’t remember the last time you went on a proper date. And god, you tried. You tried so hard to be understanding, to feel the weight of the world on his shoulders, to try and carry some of it with you.
But you were human.
And maybe humans and viltrumites couldn’t work out.
You wanted to do this over the phone, by text, anything that wouldn’t require you to see his face, but then he’d flown straight into your kitchen, boyish smile on his face, telling you he was off for the night.
Then was a good as time as any, you decide.
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“P-please.” He begs, dropping to his knees.
Needless to say the breakup wasn’t going to plan.
He nuzzles his face into your stomach, and you feel it tighten at the look in his eyes.
“I’ll be so good.”
You blink.
You’re not sure how you got into your bed, naked, with Mark above you (you know exactly how—you couldn’t resist the tears in his eyes as he begged for one more chance to make things better)
“H-aaah.” He’s panting in your ear now, thrusting slow and hard, each one punctuating his promises.
“You’re mine.” Thrust.
“Never gonna… hnggg… let you go.” Thrust.
“Shittttt… do you feel how,” Thrust. “Deep I am?”
He pushes his palm against the bulge that forms in your stomach every time he pushes in and you thrash wildly, the pleasure becoming too much to bear.
“Mark!” You shout out, and his palm covers your mouth, thumb pressing down on your tongue. You moan around his digit, swirling your tongue around it like you would his cock and he groans, pulsing hard inside you.
“It’s okayyy… cmon,” his voice is low, and there’s a cadence in it that only comes out when he has you like this, shivering and crying on his cock.
“I got you, babe.” You’re unsure how long you’ve been fucking, how much time has passed, but you’re so close and so you redirect his other hand to your clit. He starts drawing small and fast circles on it, and you see white behind your eyes as you finally come.
When you come back to, he’s already cleaned you up and tucked you in, and he’s back in his suit, standing by the window.
“Mark?” You ask groggily.
“Uhm… it’s sunrise. Gotta get back to work.” He hesitates, seeing how your eyebrows scrunch.
You can see the decision weighing on him. So despite it being the reason you wanted to break up with him, the hurt it had caused you, you give him a small nod.
Synopsis: in which popular girl!reader is done with shitty players and wants to try the newest delicacy: virgin nerds. It’s game on to seduce the physics student, who seems more than ready to abandon his life of celibacy.
But their arrangement only works if they’re both on the same page. What happens when one expects a little more than sex?
Is it game over?
Warnings: eventual smut, plot with porn, fake dating trope, college au, no curses au, mean girl!reader, fem dom!reader, nerd!jo, subby!gojo, virgin!gojo, masochist!gojo, some angst but with a happy ending, very early 2000s romcoms, reader grows a lot (hate towards her will not be tolerated), reader gets humbled quite often here lol, chapter specific warnings will be listed on the chapter, some allusions to toxic/unhealthy relationships and coping, not proofread
Word Count: 41k
Gojo art by @/Leimiruu on X
Chapter ONE - Game start
Chapter TWO - Different levels
Chapter THREE - Boss fight
Chapter FOUR - Perfect victory
Disclaimers:
♤ COMPLETED
♤ Available on AO3.
♤ This is a mix of fluff, smut and angst, so minors/ageless blogs do not interact.
♤ Any comments hating on the reader in this story will be deleted and the user will be blocked. The story plays on the mean girl trope so you will see mean girl behaviour. Just know this is all intentional. If you are sensitive to a flawed female character, do not read. I know what some of you are like. I have played these games before.
♤ This is a college au separate from my EdenU au. Different Gojo and university setting altogether. Any semblance is coincidental.
♤ Every part of this is of my own work. No AI or external inspiration was used. Please do not repost this on Tumblr or on any other platform without credits. I do not give permission for this to be translated. And please do not feed my work into AI.
synopsis: when you first became mrs. gojo, you never fucking imagined you'd end up as the first lady. or that the golden boy you fell in love with and carved your whole world around could fucking cheat on you. and that somewhere along the fallout, after scandals and sleeping with his best friend back, you'd end up sitting by his beside after a failed assassination attempt. can you still salvage your marriage? or will it be burned in the wreckage of what's left of your life and his political career?
pairing: president!gojo x first lady!reader x vice president!geto
wc: 20.5k (my longest oneshot ever i think lol)
content: mdni!!! angst and smut!!! so much emotional hurt, eventual comfort, cheating, reverse cheating, complicated relationships, gojo being sleazy, but he does love reader okay!!, so much regret, pining, heartache, reader and gojo are in their late thirties/early forties but not specified, geto is down bad but gojo is down even badder, mentions of gun violence/blood (attempted assassination), taking care of injuries, slow reconciliation, messy emotions, scheming, breakups/makeups, kissing, unprotected piv sex, desperation, denying feelings, manipulation, fingering, gojo being desperate, light choking, multiple povs
a/n: this was commission for the lovely @dayanim !! gojo art is also by @/kassandraws !! <3
Once upon a time, a very successful girl met a very handsome guy.
You both had potential. A pretty word constantly applied and purred in your ears as if it didn't actually mean privilege. Like you weren't just lucky. Bright and beautiful. Ivy League educated. Wealth most people would wish for.
Living in a daydream before you even knew each other.
You juggled internships and classes, sucked up to all the right people to make connections, itching to get hired at some prestigious place in a high-paying position – prove your worth when your family saw you as an investment.
Satoru Gojo was the heir to his father's company. A genius who slid into the seat next to yours a few months before graduation and asked if you wanted to grab dinner after class, hands clasped together like he was begging, his pretty pink bottom lip jutted out for dramatic effect. Adding a soft please as if you were ever going to be stupid enough to tell him no.
As if anyone had ever told him no.
The beginning was practically storybook. The whole whirlwind romance of expensive dates and heated sex, shrouded in an almost electric air of excitement. Falling fast and hard, exchanging love confessions like they were candy, something sweet to devour instead of cherish. Everyone called you the ‘It’ couple.
A fairytale wedding came next. A couple years of career building and travelling – fancy vacations and sports cars and more sex in hotel rooms or on the beach. You passed the bar exam. Put in long hours while he continued building on the legacy his family had left for him. Clinging on his muscled arm when people started recognizing him in public, taking photos of the man who might rule the world someday at this rate. Proud to be the one he came home to. The one who got to have his last name and his ring on your finger.
The kids were after that, another one of those deliberate decisions you made purely because you thought that was what you were supposed to do. You loved him. Planned your world around what would make him happy, tried to check off every box on his list of his life goals. Even when it meant putting your own career on hold for a while for maternity leave. Satoru tried to say you should just stay at home after your first was born, but you scoffed, insisted on hiring a nanny so you could return to work once your time off was up.
He had his goals.
You didn't want to totally let go of yours.
So when he started spending less evenings having dinners with hedge fund managers and business partners and decided to start going golfing on the weekends with politicians, you said nothing. Kissed him on the cheek and told him to call you later while you chased after the kids or left them with the nanny to take your own time with friends.
It wasn't really a surprise when he decided to run for a seat in Congress, openly supporting him every step there until it was his.
He had a knack for getting what he wanted.
Satoru was just never satisfied with what he had.
Confiding in you after sex, when you were curled up on his side while he traced tiny stars over your bare hip, little laughter lines etched by his lips as they slowly parted and said the words you still hadn't forgotten, “I want more than this.”
You had sat up, tilting your head to the side as you tried to resist the urge to tell him you had everything already. The happy marriage. The healthy kids. A future filled with sunny vacations and steamy nights. Sure, you were both starting to get a little older, but your thirties had been kind to both of you, especially when you had access to plenty of resources to stall aging. Push it back as much as you could, pretending the inevitable wouldn’t come.
“Satoru,” you murmured his name, but then he said something that changed the plot you’d been so preoccupied planning out.
“What do you think about me running for president?”
What you thought hadn’t mattered after all – not when he ended up winning by a landslide anyway.
The youngest president ever inaugurated. His cheeky smile plastered on every TV, your portraits printed on magazines, interview after interview taken, a country waiting to know who the First Lady was while you watched your husband become a political figure for the history books.
Four years. Maybe eight.
You told yourself you could keep it up that long. Be the perfect wife he wanted to parade on. You’d do anything for him, after all. Smile at all the cameras and take on whatever workload was required to fulfill your own role while he checked off another dream.
There was no big, bag dragon waiting to destroy your castle.
No, it was just your husband's inability to keep his dick in his pants.
Your prince charming had started fucking pretty models on his those pesky political trips. And you were the fool that only found out when someone sent you an anonymous photo of him in some foreign country with his hand up another girl’s dress. Lipstick stains on his collar. That stupid smirk on his face while she leaned close like she was going to kiss him.
And yet, instead of leaving him, you were still stuck.
Trapped in the marriage. Unable to do anything when your union was the fucking country’s business instead of something solely for you and him.
You forgave him at first, even when you felt like a fool for doing it when he confessed and apologized, begging you to believe it wouldn’t happen again - until, of course, it did. But eventually you had to cave in, convince yourself that maybe an open relationship would work.
Only, where he was drowning in options, you were left with just one man who wasn’t scared of having sex with the First Lady without risking your husband’s wrath.
So you fucked his best friend – and vice president – in your own lewd affair.
Was it right? Mature? Responsible?
None of the above.
But Suguru made you happy. Reminded you that your future was bigger than just Satoru Gojo or his stupid dreams.
You told yourself that you and Satoru would separate eventually, that there was no fucking way you’d stay with him after all of it, especially when what was left of your relationship imploded when you both finally had to face the fact you were fucking other people. Surviving the scrutiny of the public when it became obvious the two of you weren't on good terms was hard – but it had been bearable with Suguru by your side for most of it.
The mess that had been made still seemed like one you could clean up. Until you let some of Satoru’s dirty little secrets slip to Suguru and he subsequently leaked it to the press.
He’d been pissed. Public perception of him had tanked. People throwing around impeachment. Pitchforks being raised as newspapers printed headlines about him taking bribes, his shady dealings being put in spreads while you watched the bright, shiny, boy you once knew get burned up by his greed, becoming a man you no longer recognized.
A big fight had followed, pointing fingers and shifting blame just to end up back under his thumb, both of you promising to stop sleeping around, to pull it together and try to make your marriage work. You stopped seeing Suguru, and your husband swore that he hadn’t so much as glanced at another woman.
But the fear lingered.
Your heart racing when you saw him shake someone’s hands, or brush arms against them, throat constricting when a pretty girl would come up to speak to him, stars glittering in her eyes as he nodded along to whatever she was saying.
It didn’t last.
You told yourself that public separation was for the best, a press conference to address the fact you and your husband weren’t exactly together. There was no fucking way you could just stay with him after all of it, especially when what was left of your relationship imploded when you both finally had to face the fact that it just wasn’t working when the old wounds had left such deep scars. Surviving the scrutiny of the public when it became obvious the two of you weren't on good terms was hard. But it had been bearable with Suguru by your side for most of it, restarting your relationship in spite of Satoru’s…disapproval.
Your kids didn’t take it well. Getting in fights at school. Expelled. Acting out because you and Satoru couldn’t get your shit together. Let alone an entire country.
Another scandal. Another screw-up. Another nail driven into a coffin you called a marriage.
Life had a funny way of never fucking working out how you thought it would. You had sobbed to Suguru a thousand times, balled your fists up and wished your husband would just fucking drop dead when you were going through the worst of it.
You never actually meant it.
Satoru getting shot wasn't supposed to be part of your happily ever after.
You hadn’t even wanted to be there. Only begrudgingly attending the rally, sitting at the front row with your best smile plastered on, pretending to listen to your husband campaigning for reelection - as if he wasn’t loathed by literally half the nation.
Leg bouncing up-and-down, anxious to leave, to go back to bed, to take a nice bath with Suguru and get some fucking sleep after an exhausting week of press and planning.
“I am devoted to this country, and to my-”
Crack.
You felt the whizz first, then heard the screams. You blinked, and figured out why they were screaming only as everyone behind the podium started to hit the floor. But then another crack rang out, and you saw red.
Everything was a blur, people grabbing you, secret service agents moving fast, pulling you away as your brain finally caught up to processing the horror of what was happening.
Someone just shot your husband.
Tried to fucking assassinate him in the middle of his speech.
You were pretty sure you screamed then, desperate to look, desperate to see if they succeeded, shouting Satoru’s name, begging the universe to let him reply, to hear his voice back.
Because despite everything, all the history and the heartbreak, he was still your husband. Still the father of your children.
The love of your life.
You couldn’t see him anymore.
Completely covered up by his team as you were being moved.
To a safe place, someone said.
As if anywhere could be safe when you were still begging for someone to find out how Satoru was. If he was still alive.
You were crying by the time they got you in a car, the bulletproof glass doing fucking nothing to make you feel any better as your leg bounced up and down, body curling up as small as possible as your brain stuttered and stalled attempting to piece together the fractured moments you just witnessed.
“He’s being taken to the hospital,” someone said, and the panic already bubbling up inside you just compounded, a desperate sob escaping as you struggled to stop hyperventilating.
A small voice in your head was shouting that he was fine, that he had to be fine, rationality slipping away the harder you tried to hold onto it.
“The kids-” You started, another strangled sound cutting you off before a firm voice tried to reassure you.
“We’ll have someone pull them out of school immediately and take them to a safehouse.”
You nodded, sucking in a ragged inhale, far from polished or presentable but as close as you could get.
“I need to be there,” you heard yourself say, voice cracking as your bottom lip quivered. “I have to see him.”
Everyone else might hate him.
You did sometimes.
But he was still yours even when you didn’t want him to be.
The drive there was torture.
But when you were led in the private wing, ushered in a back entrance and led up to an empty waiting area where you were informed he was in surgery, that they didn’t think his injuries were life-threatening, you still couldn’t find a single second of relief. Not until they wheeled him out, took both of you to a heavily guarded hospital room.
White walls and blinking screens. Beeping. Sterile sheets and tiled floors.
And in the middle of it all, your husband’s unconscious body, streaks of red in his pretty white hair, long lashes fluttering softly as you stared at the bandages on him.
He was lucky, the doctor informed you. The first bullet only nicked across his shoulder. The second went through his left calf. Clean entry and exit. Missed all the important stuff. They tried talking about the importance of physical therapy, that they were optimistic he’d make a full recovery. But you could barely focus on what they were saying when your eyes were glued to the man you were being reminded was a mortal instead of a god.
Satoru was still flesh and blood.
Could still break.
Your chair was dragged up to his bedside, holding onto his hand, fingers tightly gripping onto his cold ones, desperately willing him to wake up and give you that stupid smile you had been swearing you couldn’t stand for months now.
All those complicated feelings you’d been stewing over ever since he’d taken a strange clarity at the thought you almost lost him.
When the last doctor left, the secret service detail standing outside the door and leaving you alone with your husband, you were still trying to remind yourself of all the bad times. Make yourself remember who he actually was.
How it felt when you first found out he was still fucking around when he had promised he stopped. He had just hid it better. Made sure no one was around to witness it – although you still found out when his chief of staff tried to dissuade you from surprising him at his hotel when he was a couple hours away attending some stupid conference.
Satoru hadn't seen you, but you saw him when you showed up. Leading a pretty woman in a red dress into an elevator, his hand on her ass while half his security detail followed in after him. You guessed the rest were waiting on his private floor. Paid to pretend they didn't see half the things they did.
You went back to the White House to sleep in a bed that had never really been yours.
Denial wasn't something you could live in anymore.
The anger came next.
Nanami had been sitting there on the couch in the Oval office the next morning like he was waiting for you, reading a fucking newspaper and not even bothering to peek over it to spare you a glance.
“I want a fucking divorce,” you spat out, seething and barely able to catch your breath as you glared at the seat your husband was supposed to be sitting in. So much for a fucking pillar of justice, a man of morality.
His blond chief of staff just turned the page, unamused as he sighed.
“I don't believe I'm the man you should be asking,” he dryly replied.
“Well, you see the cheating bastard more than I do these days,” you snapped back, indignation blooming under your flushed cheeks as you said it out loud. Admitted that what you suspected had been true for weeks. Satoru had started cheating on you again.
The same guy who begged you to marry him, swore that he'd make you the happiest woman alive, who used to wake you up by kissing your forehead and sleepily murmuring sweet things in your ear.
Nanami sat the newspaper down.
Huffed as he sat up straighter, adjusting the thin reading glasses on the bridge of his nose before he looked directly at you.
“Listen,” he started, and you already knew the rest would be bullshit when he was speaking to you like an adult about to let a child down. “We both know he will never let you get a divorce while he's in office.”
He was right.
And really, the idea of getting a divorce, of the whole world knowing you weren't enough for Satoru Gojo was terrifying.
So you made a stupid bargain.
Knees pressed to your chest, perched on the edge of the bed you were meant to share as the door creaked open.
Satoru stepped into the room, running his fingers through his hair, and you hated the way his ring caught the light, like his vows still meant a thing to him.
“You lied,” you murmured, wiping your exhausted eyes. Makeup smeared on your hands. Probably on your cheeks too. A mess he made.
“I-” He started, as if you wanted to hear it.
“I just, I thought you-” You stopped yourself, choking on a hard lump in your throat. “Do you not want this? Us?”
Was your marriage worth so little to him he couldn’t keep his hands off someone else?
He just had to fuck other women?
“I do,” he breathed, getting down on his knees in front of you, and all you could think of then was the moment he proposed to you, how you had whispered yes and he slipped the ring on your finger before he picked you up and twirled you around. Wondering where you’d be if you said no, if you hadn’t been blinded by how much you adored him. “I love you.”
You didn’t feel loved.
“Then why-”
“I don’t know what’s wrong with me,” he murmured, all emotional, blue eyes all big and wide, as if it could make up for what he’d done. What he kept doing.
Looking back, the whole thing had become tainted. Your own feelings tangled and twisted and so flipped around you couldn’t make sense of the memory anymore. Maybe that was just the regret though. Wishing you could rewind time and do something differently.
All you wanted was to save your relationship.
For him to stay.
“Maybe we should just open up our marriage then,” you suggested, sniffling and swallowing hard. Hoping he’d say no. Hoping he’d swear that he would stop, that all he needed was you.
But he didn’t.
Begrudging, his teeth gritted and jaw clenched tight as he said fine, probably only allowing it then because he thought you wouldn’t be able to find people to fuck the same way he could. Making a deal of no feelings being involved, promising that he’d be up front from now on, both of you struggling to stomach the idea that you’d both be sleeping with other people.
It was still easier for him than it was for you.
Suguru had found you crying in some study that was hardly ever used a couple weeks later, curled up on a couch, tissues strewn across the table as he stopped in the doorway, staring at your crumpled form.
You waited for him to lie.
To come up with an excuse. Defend his best friend. Pretend to feel sorry for you.
“I heard what he did,” he spoke softly.
Another broken sob escaped you – and he shut the door behind him.
“I wanted to kill him when Nanami told me,” he breathed.
You almost laughed, blowing your nose in a tissue, your wedding ring taunting you, white gold and diamonds that meant nothing now.
“Thanks,” you bitterly mumbled, sitting up and meeting his sober stare.
“You deserve better than him.”
You weren't sure where the lines got blurred. When wanting his comfort turned into wanting him.
But you could still recall the first time you kissed him, how your heart pounded against your rib cage, holding your breath as you leaned up to kiss him, lacing your wrists around his neck and shutting your eyes as you gingerly pressed your lips to his.
The sex was usually soft and slow. His pretty purr in your ears and his warmth covering your body, skin on skin as his mouth left marks all over your breasts, your stomach, the inside of your thighs. Wherever was hidden with clothes was fair game.
It wasn’t like Satoru would see them when you hardly spoke to him.
What was Suguru doing now?
Probably pacing the floor, worrying about you somewhere, being informed of Satoru’s condition. Relieved that he wouldn’t have to fill his shoes and take over the presidency?
Even if things were tense, terrible between the two of them since you started sleeping with him, he wouldn’t want him dead.
In some fucked-up way, it sorta felt like your fault, that if you had said something else, made a different decision somewhere along the way, that you wouldn’t be here right now.
You didn’t mean to doze off, dragged into more dreams, but you guessed the morning’s stress coupled with long nights of little sleep and longer days of being drained from meetings and benefits and responsibilities you never asked for was too much for your exhausted body.
It could’ve been two minutes or two hours.
Someone was stroking your hair, familiar fingers stirring you awake as you sat up, wiping away the dampness from your face as your eyes hazily focused on the only blue in the room.
“Sweetheart,” your husband croaked, voice raw and rough as his big hand cupped your cheek. He winced when he went to move closer to you, your breath catching as your mouth fell open. “Don't cry.”
“Satoru, you were just shot,” you hissed at him, already standing up to tuck him back under the thin blankets. Wiping your face with the back of your hand, as if it would erase the evidence of tears you hadn’t meant to let fall for him again. “You shouldn't be-”
“I survived,” he grinned.
Your mouth parted, trying to think of an argument he wouldn't immediately ignore. Those were in almost as short of supply as your sensibility. Reason and rationality slipping further out of reach the longer you looked at him.
His face had pale after the surgery, but pink had started to return to his cheeks, life in his eyes that you were worried you’d never see again. Some piece of you still had a hard time accepting it. Whispering that you might be in a morgue right now if the shooter just had better aim.
What were you supposed to feel?
Happy your husband was still alive? Grateful?
So why the hell were you so torn? Ripped between the past and the present, all the different versions of Satoru you’d known and loved and hated floating in front of you so you didn’t have to deal with the one here right now.
The one who managed to cheat death too.
You guessed a doctor or a nurse had come in, a fresh glass of water by his bedside and a clipboard with notes left next to it. You started to stand to go look at it, but he made a pained or panicked groan like he wanted you to stay.
“Don’t get up,” he pleaded, and you paused.
“I won’t if you won’t,” you reluctantly muttered, sitting back down in the uncomfortable plastic. The last time you’d been in a hospital room with him had been when your youngest son was born. You were the one in the bed – but he climbed in next to you, crammed in and grinning as he cradled your baby boy in his arms between the two of you, thanking you for giving him the greatest gift of his life.
You hated how much every memory of him had been tainted.
That one of the best moments of both of your lives had been recolored now, rotted and turned sour with time.
He relented once you smoothed your skirt down, relaxing back into the bed – but not before stealing your hand, sliding his fingers through yours with an almost content sigh. As if he hadn't just been shot a handful of fucking hours ago.
“I'm happy you're here,” Satoru softly spoke. You couldn’t remember the last time the two of you had talked like this. Alone. In quiet tones instead of shouting.
“I'm your wife,” you answered, an uncomfortable ache carved into your heart as you heard the hollowness in it. You were doing your duty.
That was what your relationship had boiled down to after he'd given up love and loyalty for this dream.
He squeezed your hand, trying to pull your attention back to him. Unable to survive without someone to stare at him, probably.
“I saw you,” Satoru spoke softly, and you did turn, head tilting up of its own volition. “Just for a second, right before the bullet went into my leg.”
You stiffened, almost flinching at the sound of that awful crack still echoing in your ears.
“And all I could fucking think was I couldn't die yet. Couldn't leave things like this,” he continued, his mouth quivering.
God, it felt like you were being gutted. Ripped apart when you knew you were the only person who would stitch yourself back together.
“Satoru, what are you trying to say?” You attempted to sound level-headed. Unaffected.
You didn’t want him to know you were already falling apart at the seams.
“I couldn't leave you,” he firmly said. “I can't.”
“You’ve left me plenty of times,” you retorted, sucking in your bottom lip to stop yourself from saying something really stupid.
Satoru cringed, and you know it hit a sore point. “I know, I-”
“You know,” you repeated, shaking your head as the bile crawled up your throat.
“I’m sorry, I-”
You weren’t listening anymore. You heard his apologies before.
At least he didn’t get to make it much further, two sharp knocks on the door outside interrupting him mid-spiel. Nanami stepped in like he already knew he wouldn’t be walking in on anything intimate.
“You’re alive,” he dryly started, and you pulled your hand away from Satoru’s to the edge of the bed.
“Don’t sound so disappointed, Nanamin,” Satoru teased, but his leg twitched, another distinct flash of pain flitting across his face at the small movement.
“We need to discuss our next steps,” he flat out ignored his president, fixing his tie as his stare shifted towards you. All serious and strained, the crease between his brows deep, years of stress etched into his chiseled face.
“Which are?” You asked, swallowing hard as you started to regret not asking to be taken to the same safe house as your children were. You were sure they were fine, that someone had told them by now that Satoru was okay, that you would both be back with them as soon as you could.
“I don't care if you can barely stand to look at each other,” Nanami sternly scoffed, glancing between both of you as he stood stiffly by the door. “But until you make a complete recovery, you are a united front. The last thing this country needs right now is-”
“We get it,” Satoru groaned, waving his hand dismissively and wincing as he propped himself up with some pillow.
“No, I don't think you do,” Nanami snidely shot back, fixing his glasses to glare at his boss. You wondered how much he had to do in the hours since everything went wrong. How many fires he had to put out, how he was managing to quell the panic that was probably popping up across the nation when the president had been attacked on live TV.
“What do you want us to do?” You asked, pretending you didn't feel it when Satoru's other hand slid back on top of yours on the bed.
“Tell everyone you're back together,” Nanami scoffed, as if it was obvious. “Hold hands, say it made you realize the importance of family, I don’t really care as long as it’s believable.”
Believable.
You almost laughed. You reflexively turned to your husband, waiting for him to automatically agree, or say that it wouldn’t be a problem. Make the decision for you.
He had suggested it before, tried to convince you to get back together, but you’d denied him back them, insisted that the media would chew you up and spit you out. But the circumstances were different now, you supposed considering he’d been shot.
“What do you think?” He asked instead, your face scrunching up in surprise before you forced yourself to look back towards Nanami, masking your feelings with practiced nonchalance.
“If that’s what the nation needs,” you muttered.
One of you had to consider the country.
Do what was right.
It still felt icky when you were sitting with your fingers laced with his later the same night in front of a green screen while Satoru spoke into a microphone about his condition thankfully not being serious. Announcing he sustained relatively mild injuries, like the camera wasn’t being angled from the waist up to disguise how hurt he was. They dressed him up, passed him a speech, fed him lines to say. Probably edited the whole thing to make it look like he was back in the White House already.
“I am incredibly fortunate that the bullets only grazed me,” he lied like it was second nature, but he was squeezing your hand tight, like he needed your strength. “And that I have this wonderful woman by my side to support me.”
He brought your hand up to his mouth, kissing the back of it softly. A show of adoration. You smiled at him, small and relieved. It wasn’t hard to act like you’d been in hell for the last twelve hours. But it was hard to pretend like you were breathing in fresh air now.
Feigning that you found the light after a long, dark tunnel.
You didn’t have lines to deliver.
Just being there was apparently enough.
Afterwards was a blur, helping the nurse make sure he was back in his hospital bed, tucked under the blankets as you leaned uncomfortably against the cold wall. The security was tight, searches required for anyone that came in or out, the staff thoroughly being vetted, all the usual measures you took heightened times ten now.
“Sweetheart,” Satoru called you that stupid pet name again, the knife digging back into your own open wound of a heart.
“I’m, um, gonna go,” you breathed, voice nearly breaking as you blinked. “Stay with the kids overnight.”
His smile faltered. New frown lines forming by his mouth.
But he didn’t pick a fight or protest.
“Tell them I love them,” he quietly requested, and you nodded, biting down on the inside of your cheek until you could taste the blood on your tongue. Satoru was still staring, the harsh white lights only making his eyes appear broken, only a thin sliver of blue nearly swallowed up by his pupils as his lips slowly parted again. “I love you.”
You left.
But you always returned.
Back the next morning, kids in tow, ready to bring him back after he had been released. Instructions given on keeping his wounds clean, avoiding strenuous activities, pretty much precisely what you expected to hear. But they suggested getting crutches, or a cane when it came to walking more than just a minute or two at a time. And despite both of them probably being way too old for it, they were both hanging behind you as they saw him as something other than untouchable for the first time in their lives. Too scared to say anything, just staring at their father in a hospital gown, sitting up with his legs swung over the side of the bed, one wrapped in thick bandages.
Someone had left one of his suits out at the end of the bed, freshly pressed, not a single wrinkle on it as he braced himself to stand on his own for the first time.
“Dad?” Your daughter murmured, fear in her voice that Satoru tried to laugh off. Ease the tension. “Are you-”
“I’m just fine, baby,” he grinned at her, your heart thumping a little louder as he held out his arms, more bandages peeking out underneath his gown. “Come give your old man a hug.”
“You’re not old,” your son huffed, like he was offended at the idea he could have an aging father.
But they both scurried out to cluster around him. One on each side. He wrapped his arms over their growing frames, tugging them in and squeezing them until they started to scoff and squeal in his grip.
You thought you knew all the different ways your heart could hurt.
But this was something new. Seeing your babies in the arms of your husband when a day ago, you thought he might die. Acutely aware that nothing was guaranteed anymore.
And sure, they weren’t babies anymore. Old enough to not need either of you the way they used to. With friends and phones and lives you disrupted by dragging your relationship under public scrutiny.
“Mom?” Your son mumbled, looking back from his father’s embrace as he jutted out his bottom lip. He took the separation the hardest. Starting fights in school. Acting out at home and out of it. He had the same eyes as Satoru, bright and bleeding with hurt, struggling to accept what was happening as they peered into the most shattered shards of you.
“Yeah?” You asked, swallowing nervously.
“Why aren’t you hugging him too?” His sister asked, too observant for her own good.
“I just wanted you guys to have your moment with him,” you murmured, begrudgingly walking over to where they were. Leaning down to hug Satoru over them, sandwiching both of them as your hand hesitantly patted the shoulder blades you used to rake your nails down and scratch up.
His own huge palms ran over your back, keeping you there a few seconds longer than you planned, soft and steady in his hold.
“We should let your dad get dressed,” you cleared your throat, pulling back. Your hands gently on their back, trying to guide them back as if they even listened these days. But you couldn’t stop your treacherous eyes from turning back to watch him stand, his features scrunched up as he strained his muscles. Popping the pain killer the doctors had left in a cup for him by the bed and washing it down with water before he turned to start taking his suit off the hanger.
Catching a glimpse of his ass through the open flaps of the nightgown, your cheeks heating up as you reflexively glanced up – just to realize he was looking back at you, a small smirk curling up on your lips like he’d known you’d been staring.
You thought you’d return to the White House.
But you knew fifteen minutes in that you were being taken somewhere else.
The kids stuffed between you in the seats, both of them eagerly chattering his ears off like he was their captive audience while he constantly readjusted, stretching his long legs out as much as he could and glancing over at you at every turn.
“Nanami found somewhere for us to stay for now,” Satoru was speaking to you, but both the kids perked up, and he pretended it was for them. “Think of it kind of like a vacation, okay?”
Just a heavily guarded one.
“Does it have a pool?” Your daughter beamed, and you couldn’t remember the last time you’d seen her smile so big.
“Hopefully,” he winked, his eyes finding yours just for you to avoid his stare again.
A few members of approved press were waiting to snap a handful of photos of you all walking back in as a family, from an angle where it should be impossible to tell where you were staying at. Another thing to show the public that he was okay. That his personal life wasn’t the total wreck most news stations and magazines were making it out to be. Satoru’s not-wounded arm casually slung over your shoulder and squeezing you close even if it dropped the moment you were back inside, a few of his most trusted staff members waiting to bombard him with updates.
You slipped away, squirreling the kids back to where their nanny was waiting, promising that you’d be back around dinner time to check on them even though they just rolled their eyes and asked when they’d get their phones back.
It was only then that you realized you didn’t have yours either.
Had you left it in the car before his speech even started? In the one afterwards? Given it to one of the secret service agents to hold onto since you didn’t have any pockets?
Fuck.
You’d have to try to ask around – find out where it ended up. Although you were pretty good about scrubbing messages and calls from it, photos of the aftermath of your affair erased or moved somewhere no one else could reach, you still didn’t like risking someone snooping around and finding something they shouldn't if they figured out your passcode.
Those were just excuses though.
You just wanted to call Suguru.
He had to be far past stressed now. How long had it been since you'd gone twenty four hours without speaking? Weeks? A couple months?
Not since you’d separated from Satoru and started sleeping with him again.
You wanted his nose nuzzling against your neck. His scent on your skin. His soft mouth to murmur all those nice things you were craving, pretty whispers you would cling to to stop yourself from drowning.
Was he back at the White House right now? Running the show for Satoru?
You glanced back for a familiar face, anyone you could actually trust who might let you borrow theirs, frowning until you landed on Nanami watching the scene of Satoru being praised and peppered with question after question unfolding from a door frame nearby.
“I don't know who has my phone. Can I borrow yours?” You asked, quiet enough to not draw any attention from your husband.
Nanami didn't even look at you, just shook his head with that same bored expression.
“No phones here,” he vaguely explained, irritation pricking under his skin too in this situation. “Security says it's too much of a risk.”
Like having the some fucking press jackasses snap photos wasn't?
But you knew better than to argue here. Or now, where Satoru was so close by.
“Do you want me to show you around?”
The house was fairly standard. A little smaller than you expected. Hardly any windows. Crawling with agents that you supposed were there for your protection, even if their presence just felt like you were being smothered.
Nanami took you to your room.
Only to casually mention that you and Satoru would hopefully only be staying for a couple weeks while the FBI hunted down his assailant. You were nodding along, about to dismiss him until you noted the strained twitch of his mouth.
“What room will Satoru be staying in?” You asked, brows scrunched together as you opened the closet just to find your own clothes already hanging inside. Next to a slew of suits you recognized.
But Nanami’s silence had said it before you even saw them.
Great.
Just fucking great.
So you were still stuck with him.
You had insisted on at least a cot being set up by the bed, threatening to get a fucking blow-up mattress delivered id they didn't if you were being forced to share a room with him again.
As if it wasn’t hard enough to sort out how you felt about your husband when he wasn’t around.
The rest of the day dragged on, taking care of your responsibilities, filling out statements for Nanami and debating on seeing if he’d at least deliver a letter to Suguru for you or scoff in your face. Eating dinner with your kids while you tried to ignore the fact two men in black suits were standing in the same room as you and two more were waiting on the other side of the door. Coming up with another excuse for why Satoru didn’t show up, mumbling that he was probably just busy being president.
You tried to curl up on your side on the cot afterwards, but the sleep wouldn’t come.
He did. Eventually.
When the clock on the nightstand had ticked ten past eleven, the door creaking open as his voice broke through the quiet.
“Baby?” Your body betrayed you. Heart pounding too hard in your chest as you resisted the temptation to reply. “Are you awake?”
“Just go to sleep,” you muttered back, refusing to turn.
“Can we talk?” He asked. Funny, when you both had failed to have a productive conversation so many times before.
“About what?” You yawned, pressing your ear against the pillow harder like it could suffocate the effect he had on you.
“Us,” he murmured.
“How’s your leg?” You changed the subject, hoping it would dissuade him. But unfortunately for you, Satoru was the most persistent man you’d ever met.
“Hurts like a bitch,” he answered, chuckling like he was exaggerating, but you could hear how strained it was. “I’m sorry I missed dinner with the-”
“Yeah,” you cut him off.
“Are you sleepy?” He hummed, and you wondered what was the specific misstep that started this awful chain of events. What was the moment when it started? When it became too late to stop the snowball from rolling and rolling until it swallowed both of you and you were stuck making awkward conversation like you hadn’t been married for over a goddamn decade?
“Exhausted,” you shrugged, body tensing as you listened to the shuffle of him undressing. The rustle of clothes hitting the floor, the sound of the dresser opening and shutting, the now-uneven footsteps as he struggled to get dressed.
And then you heard the sound of a bandage being peeled off, a low grunt that made you flinch, sitting up as he flickered the lamp on.
You should’ve laid back down.
But all it took was a single look at his wounds and you were begrudgingly getting up, padding barefoot over to the attached bathroom where medical supplies had been stocked in advance for him.
“What are you-”
“Cleaning it,” you interrupted, hating yourself for being such a sucker for him even now.
“You don’t have to,” he said, as if he didn’t secretly want you to.
“Can you move a little?” You murmured when you returned, hesitating by the bed as you watched him try to get his leg up properly.
“You know, I think there's a doctor here I could-”
“Do you not want me to?” You asked, brows pinched together as your fingers hesitated over the bandage you had been told to clean and replace twice a day.
“I do,” he admitted.
You attempted to tell yourself it wasn’t his leg. Going through all the motions, following the steps clinically, your fingers skimming against his skin as you wiped it clean and rebandaged it carefully.
But you felt the weight of him watching you until you were finished. Even after you stood up and started walking away, putting back up what you didn’t use and tossing the previous bandages, like some invisible string tied around your wedding band tugging you back to him.
You didn't say anything. Just walked back to the cot, about to get on it before he spoke up.
“Sleep on the bed.” Was it a request? A demand? A presidential decree?
You couldn't tell with him.
“It’s not like we're actually back together,” you mumbled under your breath, getting back up on it without facing him. You wouldn't look. Couldn't in case you crumbled.
The past thirty-six hours had felt more like half a year. Wrung dry and hung up hollow.
“You’re my wife,” he echoed your earlier statement, reminding you of vows he'd broken first.
“Please don't act like that means something to you now,” you dismissively muttered. You could feel the tension ride, threatening to snap as the blankets behind you crinkled and the sound got closer.
“You're my first lady,” he said, as if it was something you wanted. Something you would've chosen for yourself if it weren't for him.
“I could've been anything,” you hissed back, fuming, furious anger ripping and shredding its way up your throat. You'd rather be in a courtroom, or hunched over a desk reviewing case notes – not thinking of how your future consisted of defending the dick you married and planning what stupid Christmas decorations to put up in a home you never wanted while pretending to give a shit.
Not making sure his gunshot wounds from an assassination attempt weren't getting infected.
And then he did something he'd never done before.
De-escalated.
“I'm sorry,” Satoru softly said, making all that rage abruptly stall just by stunning you. “I’m so fucking sorry that I can’t find the right thing to say to show you how much I hate the husband I’ve been to you.”
You didn't know what to say. What to do when it sounded like the truth.
“I feel like I just woke up from a really fucking bad dream, and all I want is my wife back,” he added, his words already starting to loop around in your head.
“You shouldn't-” Your breath got caught in your throat, voice breaking off as you closed your eyes before you could start to cry.
“I can't believe what I did to you. To us,” he added, and you loathed how eagerly part of you began to absorb his pretty words. How warm his affection felt when you'd been missing it and him for so fucking long. “I'll regret it for the rest of my life.”
You hoped he did.
“Good night, Satoru,” you whispered, laying back down and pulling the blanket back on top of you.
You still dreamed of him. Of the before days that had been given up for this. Where he only ever made you laugh instead of cry. Where he came home from work practically ready to worship you, picking you up and peppering your face with kisses. But just as the dream started to morph, twist into a cruel reminder of your current reality, you woke up.
Satoru was still there for once. Sleeping on the side of the bed closest to you, messy hair strewn across the pillow, snoring softly. You frowned, hand reaching out, about to nudge his shoulder and wake him up, but you paused. Stopped yourself before your fingers could touch him again.
He didn't need you for stuff like that.
Not anymore.
You thought being here would be like it'd been back at the White House. Paths that only got crossed when they had to, only catching glimpses of him when he was walking somewhere else, standing on the other side of a closed office door.
But when it was time for lunch, when you were walking in with your daughter and listening to her complain about some idiot boy in her class, he was already there, sitting at the head of the table and taking a long sip from a glass of soda.
“Well, as long as you don't marry him, you'll be fine,” you muttered, eyes narrowing as your husband choked on his drink, coughing and clearing his throat while your daughter made some disgusted noise.
“How are my favorite girls doing?” Satoru tried to ask, pretending this was normal. That he hadn't been missing family meals for so long, you couldn't quite recall when it started anymore.
But he was back for dinner.
And the next breakfast.
Sometimes he was a few minutes late, or had to shoo away the handful of staff allowed access here away until after he ate, but he kept showing up.
He'd taken to using a cane to get around, supporting his weight on his left leg on it, usually wincing by the time he walked in, resting the cane on the table while you all ate. But he smiled at the kids, at you, cracked jokes and asked them about their friends, their interests, trying to make up for his absence by being here now.
His attention was enough for them.
Honestly, you hadn't seen them this happy since the first year he'd taken office. Your son openly asking if you all would really have to leave here, white brows scrunched together in frustration when he pressed to know if this meant you two were going to finally get back together.
You opened your mouth, ready to accept being the bad guy to them and reiterate that this was temporary, that you were waiting for the FBI to find who shot their father and that things would go back to your typical normal soon.
But Satoru cleared his throat first, a surprisingly stern expression on his face as he looked at his youngest.
“It's my fault your mother and I aren't together anymore,” he addressed him, your fork frozen in your hand as the lump in his throat bobbed. “I broke her trust and-”
“Can't she just forgive you already?” Your son whined back, still childish despite his latest growth spurt. He would probably be as tall as his dad one day, but right now, he just seemed like a boy. Clueless to what a relationship was supposed to look like outside of the mess of a marriage you were doing a shitty job setting an example of.
“She doesn't have to forgive me at all,” Satoru shut him down anyway, and your stupid heart stalled. “I messed up, okay? If you want to blame someone, blame me.”
They would always love him though.
Incapable of doing anything other than looking up to him.
Your feelings were…more complicated.
Your nighttime conversations had almost become more casual. He asked about your day, tried to ask if there was anything he could request staff to pick up for you, thanked you when you helped clean his healing wounds. Constantly attempted to convince you to let him take the cot like it was the proverbial dog house.
His offers were rejected.
But it would be a lie to say that the hardened shell around your heart hadn’t started to form a few cracks. The glue just wouldn’t hold.
Nanami showed up two weeks later, folders stacked in his arms as he called you both in for a meeting. Running back over things you were missing, schedules that were behind, boring business stuff.
Laying out articles and outlining what new laws were trying to slip through to get passed without Satoru there. His reputation had surprisingly managed to improve in spite of the assassination, or maybe because of it. His name leaving people’s mouths without being accompanied by the word impeachment.
Most of it was boring, nodding along while he and Satoru argued and bickered over little details while you itched for a chance to speak to him privately. Ask him again about how long this was meant to last. Almost sure you wouldn’t get the opportunity until he started packing his stuff up, his pen precariously left on the edge.
You uncrossed your legs, purposely bumping into the table while Satoru brought up the status of the investigation, neither of them noticing the soft thump of it hitting the floor.
“There should be an update soon,” he vaguely replied.
Nanami stood up, slinging his laptop bag over his shoulder, holding the folders to his chest as one of the agents opened the door for him to go.
Your hand tightened around the pen as you bent over to pick it up from underneath the table, guilt blossoming in the pit of your stomach from a seed you'd been watering with every thought of Suguru.
“I’ll go give it to him,” you muttered, holding it up in your palm as if your husband wouldn't know it was some flimsy excuse.
Nanami was halfway out the front door, but you jogged to catch up, out-of-breath but not from the exertion by the time you made it to him. He stopped, turning halfway towards you, his hazel eyes raking over you like he already knew what you were doing. What you wanted from him. “When can I speak to Suguru?” You softly asked, swallowing the lump in your throat as his brows subtly arched up.
“You do understand the security you are under is for your own safety, right?” He wryly asked, as if you hadn't heard the spiel before.
“He's the vice president,” you said, almost immediately feeling stupid once it was out loud. Cold reality sinking in that your relationship was just asking for another major scandal, something that would strip Satoru of the last of his power if anyone else ever found out.
“Which is precisely why he cannot be in the same location when the FBI does not have anyone in custody. Right now, the entire world is looking at you and your husband,” Nanami reminded you, your mouth closed tight as the regret coiled in your stomach. “You can speak to your boyfriend once Satoru shows the public he's completely recovered.”
You watched him in silence as he walked back out to where a blacked-out car was waiting for him.
Only shutting the door and turning away after he got in the backseat, his last sentence lingering in your thoughts as the slam of a car door echoed between the noise of chirping birds and the soft sway of the wind.
You were still holding his pen.
“You could’ve asked about him in front of me,” Satoru spoke up from behind you. You looked back, but the rest of the foyer was empty. You supposed he must've ordered all his agents to wait somewhere else. He was standing maybe four feet away, but the distance felt too far for either of you to cross, unable to build a bridge when you were sure one of you would just burn it down anyway.
“What?” You blinked.
“Him,” he muttered, his voice dry. Hurt. It made you happier than it should. To shatter him the way he broke you so long ago.
“What do you want from me, Satoru?” You stiffly asked, not sure if you had anything left to give him.
“I want you to miss me the way you miss him,” Satoru said, and it took all of your restraint not to respond. “I know it’s not fair, and it’s-”
“Do you miss sleeping with other women?” You tilted your head to the side, unable to contain the tremble in the question.
Satoru recoiled.
“I miss when you were mine,” he muttered, shaking his head a little, regret etched into every line of his face as he took the tiniest step towards you. “Miss the man I was before I fucked everything up with us.”
“Yeah,” you scoffed. “Me too.”
The next few days dragged on. The hardest part was not staring at your husband. Pretending that this sad puppy version of him had no effect on you. That his long looks and pretty pout weren’t working at all, as if your body wasn’t a total traitor when you had to fall asleep listening to his breathing at night.
Trusting him again was something only an idiot would do.
Satoru Gojo would only let you down.
He couldn’t help it, you supposed. It was who he was now.
And you ended up sitting alone at the table waiting for him and his mini-mes to show up, familiar disappointment beginning to bubble in your stomach as you counted the seconds in your head.
But before you could give up and get up, the door swung open, your kids stumbling in first with arms full of plates. Satoru close behind them, cradling a big one himself, the warm scent of food flooding in with them.
“We made dinner,” your daughter giggled, a bright glimmer in her eyes that you missed seeing. “Your favorite.”
“I’m a little rusty in the kitchen,” Satoru muttered as they laid out the dishes. There was no air of expectation. Running his fingers through his hair, shrugging his shoulders almost as if he was shy or nervous. Two things he’d never been in his life. “Not sure how good it’ll be.”
“It’s nice,” you managed. And weirdly enough, you meant it.
They made you sit there and wait for them to bring everything out, your son leaning over to pile food on your plate, picking up your fork and taking small bites just to be surprised by the taste anyway. The hint of too much salt. The familiar texture. The little details that confirmed Satoru had really been the one to make it.
Your eyes flitted over to him, a small smile curling up on your lips when you saw he was already staring at you. Intimacy that flickered instead of burned. Like a candle on a birthday cake instead of a wildfire ready to wipe out an entire forest.
For once, you didn’t feel like your head was under water when you went to sleep that night.
And the next morning brought the news you’d been waiting for.
Nanami returning back up with nothing but a briefcase, adjusting his tie as his stare flickered between you and Satoru, like he could sense the tension returning – or picked up on how much less toxic it was compared to a month ago.
“They have a suspect,” he muttered, your brows arching up as a strange feeling floated up. Discomfort?
Whatever it was, it was strangling, your voice tight as you tried to sound not bothered, “In custody?”
“No,” he said, but it was careful. Calculated. “Not yet.”
You swallowed hard, cautiously glancing over to Satoru, who was listening with a distant expression, staring out one of the few windows here. Maybe disappointed that your vacation might be coming to an end sooner than he thought. “So what does that mean?”
“You’ll be able to return to the White House today.”
The rest was a blur.
The few staff here had started packing up your stuff, your kids complaining when you mentioned they’d have to be returning to their classes and studies, begging to stay a few more days while you discreetly listened to Satoru and Nanami making arrangements for some gala against gun violence to make a point that Satoru was still strong enough to lead the country and take a stance when it counted.
Your mouth turned down, wondering how the hell it would work when he was still relying on a cane when he had to walk for more than a few minutes. On pain killers and sheer willpower?
But you guessed it wasn’t your concern.
You would just be expected to show up and be his favorite accessory. Cling to his arm and charm the old men whose favor he craved.
Returning to the White House was practically its own event. Cameras flashing and microphones being shoved out, sure to be highly publicized as you and Satoru both sheltered your children through, throwing out small waves and practiced smiles.
The sun was starting to slip lower, a million people itching to speak to Satoru, but you were searching through the crowd for a different face. Dark hair. Dark eyes. Someone who would turn all your confusion into something that made sense.
But Suguru wasn’t there.
Not waiting for you, or even hanging around the edges ready to offer Satoru an update on what he’d been doing in the weeks since either of you had seen him.
Your jaw clenched, barely able to conceal your reaction as you returned through halls that didn’t feel familiar anymore. You hated it here.
Loathed every painting on the wall and the carpet on the floors and the paths you used to take. It felt like a prison.
Did that make Satoru your warden?
His presidency your sentence?
At least you wouldn't have to spend so much time with him – not when you were sure things would return to the limbo you'd been living in where you rarely saw him.
Except, when you showed up for dinner, he was already there. The kids teasing him for some silvery strands that has started to pepper through the white of his hair, all of them turning to smile brightly at you as you walked through the door. An empty seat beside him, waiting for you to take it.
Your throat was closing up as you did, smoothing out your dress as you desperately controlled your face.
“Is this going to be like, a thing now?” You asked under your breath as you picked at your food with a fork. Wouldn't this just make it so much fucking harder for all of you once you went back to normal? What about after his term? Once he wasn't a president anymore and you filed for divorce?
“I made a decision I should've made a long time ago,” Satoru quietly replied. “I'm putting my family first.”
Your mouth opened, but you just took a reluctant bite of your food before you could say it was too late.
“You're my priority,” he murmured, and a piece of you that probably lacked brain cells wished that he had this revelation years ago. “I promise.”
How much of that was actually real?
You ended up just sitting on the edge of your old bed asking yourself questions you already knew the answers to. Wearing an old slip you found in the bottom of the drawer, something soft and lacey, but you weren't even sure who you were wearing it for. Was Suguru even staying here? Had they put him up in a safe house of his own? Or maybe let him stay in his own place with just extra security?
Satoru probably wouldn't show up.
He basically had his own bedroom now, one on the same floor and wing since your separation started.
Why would he-
“Hey,” his voice cut through the silence, your head snapping over to watch him limp in, cane in hand as he slowly started over.
“I figured you would sleep in your, um, other room,” you replied. Not harsh or hateful. More of an observation, you guessed.
“Can I still sleep here?” He asked, and you couldn’t believe the slow bob of your head up and down instead of left and right.
He walked over to you, footsteps slow, unsure. One leg dragging a little behind the other until he stopped just in front of the bed. Slowly turning to sit next to you, hardly an inch between your thigh and his, sinking into the soft mattress.
“What happened to us?” You whispered into the air. If the clock could turn back, would you try to save him? If you woke up tomorrow back in college, would you have scoffed and said no to that date? Reset your fate?
Would he?
“I think about that first night sometimes,” he muttered, a sharp sting stabbing through your heart as you realized which one he was talking about. “How fucking stupid it was.”
“Satoru,” you breathed his name, the sharp teeth of panic sinking into your heart as you started shaking your head.
“I just, I still can’t fucking believe I did it. Me and Suguru were just drinking, taking shots at the bar and celebrating, fuck, I mean, we were talking about you, and the next thing I know, I’m waking up next to some stranger in the sheets and-”
“Stop,” you were begging, tears trying to choke you up. What the hell was he talking about? Suguru had never once mentioned being there, acted like it was as big of a fucking surprise to him as it was to you when you found out about all the cheating.
“I don’t know what the fuck was wrong with me. Why I kept doing it afterwards, I-I just couldn’t stop feeling so slimy, and wanted so fucking badly to forget, but all I ever seemed to do was keep sabotaging myself,” he was rambling now, inhaling hard as he buried his face in his hands. His left leg was stretched out, twitching as he talked.
“Why are you-” You stopped yourself, clinging to all of your own jagged edges even when it hurt so much. “Why are you even saying this?”
“It was never about you,” he murmured. “I was the one who didn’t deserve you. Who was stupid and insecure and jealous-”
“I already know that,” you half-huffed, forcing yourself to look down at the floor before you fell apart completely.
“And then I saw the way Suguru started staring at you, like, like he was just fucking waiting to snatch you, and I-”
“Satoru,” you repeated, wiping away a stray tear that fell, a little broken noise escaping before he finally shut up.
And then he was brushing away the dampness from your cheeks, flinching when you felt that first gentle graze of his fingertips. But you just sat there, let his hand cup your face, your body betraying you by slowly melting into his touch.
You should recoil. Retreat. Remove yourself.
Something.
All you could do was stay wrapped in his warm cloud of comfort, his cologne clinging to your skin and your eyes on his mouth.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. A promise that sounded so pretty coming from his perfect lips. “I’m so sorry. I love you so much.”
It would be the easiest thing in your life to believe him.
Second-nature to accept what he said.
Your mind was already savoring it, turning over every tremor, picking apart his tone. You wanted to hear it for so long. Hear him breaking and bending for you.
“You don’t have to say it back,” he breathed, his thumb dragging over your cheekbone like he was scared you might not feel the same anymore. That he’d lost your love forever with just himself to blame for it.
“I-” You started, not totally sure where you were going with it, too much spit pooling in your mouth to continue. You glanced down at your lap, only then realizing your thigh was pressed against his now. Did he move closer?
Or was that one on you?
“I miss you,” you finally admitted, but the relief was bittersweet.
“Can I show you how much I miss you too?” He asked, and you loathed that you let him.
His finger skimmed over your shoulder, pulling down your slip as his nose subtly brushed against yours as if he was getting ready to kiss you.
You froze, an awful, icky feeling washing over your entire body, fingers shaking as your breath got stuck in your throat.
“Sweetheart,” Satoru whispered, and you realized you were shaking your head now, your whole body trembling as you mechanically forced yourself away from him. A cruel thought bouncing around in your brain that you couldn't shut down.
Did he call the other girls that?
Whisper it in their ear like a promise? Tell them that he was leaving you soon or spin a pretty tale about your relationship being for show these days?
“What's wrong?” He pressed, those blue eyes you had adored so much glittering in the light of the moon, but all you could fucking feel was that they didn't shine for you.
“I thought maybe I could, but I can't,” you swallowed, stepping back from the bed, covering up your body as you bent over to rummage through your dresser for a robe.
“Why?” Satoru inhaled, sounding almost choked up about it. “Baby, don't-”
“It disgusts me,” you admitted, the word coming out raw and wounded, ripped from some primal part of you. “When I think of you putting your fucking dick inside of someone else-”
“I-”
“No,” you stopped him. “You don’t get it. Weren’t there to see how many nights I cried because of you.”
“Don’t you think I would do anything I could to take it back?” He desperately begged, limping after you as you tied the robe tight around your waist.
“I don’t know what you really think,” you dryly muttered. “What to believe from you.”
“Believe me when I tell you that I’d do anything for you,” Satoru grabbed your hand, squeezing as half of you wanted to stay and the rest of you was screaming to run. “That I will spend my life showing you how sorry I really am.”
“You know how hard it is to trust you when-” You couldn’t even finish the sentence, sucking in on your cheek and biting down hard as you scrunched your eyes shut.
“How do you think it feels every time I think about Suguru?” Satoru rebutted, his voice low. Like a weak wounded animal. “Watching you fall for him, look at him the way you used to look at me.”
“Don’t act like it’s his fault,” you defended him. “He-”
“He was there. Always fucking there and just waiting for me to fuck up,” he argued back, and you couldn’t stand that he was starting to change your mind. Or, at least, make you see things were even more crooked than you thought they were if you were considering the chance that Suguru had something to do with Satoru cheating on you.
“What do you want?” Your voice cracked.
“You.”
“No, no, you-” You were about to start crying, a thick sob building up because if you believed that, then what would be next?
“Just stop seeing him. Please. I’ll do anything,” he was begging, fingers trying to slither into your palm so he could hold your hand. “Whatever it takes to fix us.”
“You know I had sex with him on our bed,” you admitted, halfway hoping to hurt him, dig the knife in and create a matching wound. He used to say you were soulmates. Wouldn’t it make sense to have matching scars? “Let him bend me over right there and fuck me until I forgot your name.”
Satoru went stiff, hand rigid in yours before you ripped it away.
And as soon as the anger was out, hanging in the air between you, you just felt like you were the one bleeding too. Sliced by your own blade of hurt and hate.
“I should sleep in one of the guest bedrooms,” you muttered, gutted and hollow.
It didn’t take a genius to see he didn’t want you to, mouth open like he might try to work his magic and make you stay, or maybe attempt to stand and follow you out, but you snatched his cane by the bed on your way out.
“Are you seriously-”
You slammed the door shut before you could keep arguing.
The ceiling in the closest spare room wasn't so comforting either.
Just made you think of Suguru more. Wondering where he was. If he was in his own bed thinking of you right now.
You hated not being able to go to him right now. Completely clear the air and let him reassure you that he was the innocent one here. That Satoru was still the evil husband that was eventually going to be your ex.
You were half-tempted to sneak around the halls on the off-chance he might still be in his office here.
God, it felt sort of disgusting for leaving him out like this, for the treacherous feelings Satoru kept stirring up when you were supposed to still be separated.
Even if the public thought you were back together, you'd be lying to yourself if you tried to say the lines weren't starting to get blurred in private. God, you were going to sleep in the same bed as him. Nearly let him undress you with just that pout and those puppy dog eyes.
When for all you knew, the second he started walking entirely on his own, he’d start fucking around again.
Tossing and turning in a cold bed, biting your lip as you wrestled for any kind of rest.
And then there was a knock.
Just a short, somehow uncertain one.
Your heart skipped a beat before you even considered who it could be from.
“I can’t sleep leaving things like that,” Satoru spoke into the dark, his voice tinged with raw pain. You almost said that you had left things far fucking worse before, but what was the point of bringing up the past?
“Why not?” You whispered, pulling the blanket around you protectively.
“Because I want better for us.”
He walked in, one foot dragging along the floor until the mattress shifted, dimpling under his weight as he leaned on it for support.
“I want to be a man you can rely on, not run away from,” he breathed.
God, you were so sick of running.
But stopping sounded even scarier.
And still, despite the fact it felt like your heart was being torn in half, you stayed silent when you heard him get into bed next to you, just bit your cheek at his low hiss of pain after chasing you here.
You didn’t tell him to get out or go.
The most terrifying part was how well you slept with him there.
Actually waking up rested for once, his strong arm wrapped around your waist that you had to slip out from, unable to stop yourself from rolling him over to stop him from snoring. Leaving the cane by his side of the bed, wrapping the robe around you tighter as you tried to sneak back to the main bedroom to get changed.
Some invisible, intangible thing lifted off your chest now that you finally felt like you had something over Satoru. That he was, at last, the loser.
Chasing and crying and desperate for a change.
You still half-expected that he’d go back on his grand promises. To fall back into old patterns.
But as the days dragged on, his presence didn’t dwindle.
In fact, in spite of how slammed he was with far more important stuff, he found a way to show up. No longer missed meals, or made a habit of disappearing or drowning himself in paperwork and problems in the Oval Office. Finding you in whatever room or study you tried to hole up in, trying to bribe his way back into your heart with snacks and sweet gestures.
And Suguru was nowhere to be seen.
Heard, sure. His presence was a phantom and passed down by second or thirdhand accounts. Nanami said he was working from his own place, under his own security detail for the time being.
Until the FBI finished had their suspect officially in custody.
You were surprised it had taken them this long, especially when the public had shifted enough to start turning their vitriol towards their investigation. Suspicious that no arrest had been made, wild stories being spread as magazines and news stations desperately tried to request interviews with your husband for any details.
He took a few, but insisted on you being there, his hand on your side keeping you close as you both answered questions and smiled at the cameras, reassuring the nation that he was recovering well, that your relationship was only getting stronger.
It didn’t feel like a lie.
And when he walked out holding your hand, you honestly forgot to drop his for longer than you’d care to admit.
You hadn’t fought since that night. No bitter arguments or big blowouts. But the quiet wasn’t so awkward. Didn’t carry the same angry tension it had before. You hadn’t forgiven him. But you were tired of hating him.
Holding onto the hurt just felt like you were making the wound worse.
It didn’t help your resolve when he had opened up an entirely new worry, your tedious trust in Suguru starting to fray now that you had a reason to suspect that maybe he lied to you too.
You didn’t know when you’d be able to see him again.
Weren’t totally sure what you would say when you did.
Things were different in a way you still couldn’t quite qualify. And you couldn’t shake the feeling you were standing at a crossroads, scared to choose the wrong path.
You stared at your own reflection.
Dolled up in some absurdly expensive dress, makeup done and set, hair sprayed into place as you touched the diamond necklace dangling down your collarbone. Ready to be paraded around a party while your husband charmed the crowd and reminded them why anyone voted for him in the first place. A gala against gun violence, a statement to be made. Satoru stepped up behind you, popping a couple painkillers as he tried to disguise his limp.
He looked down at you, and your stupid heart fluttered at the sight of him.
His red tie was just a little crooked, the same as his soft smile, glancing between you and the mirror as he stood by your side, his gold wedding band gleaming in the overhead light. “You look gorgeous.”
“You’re not terrible looking,” you begrudgingly hummed, and he grinned like it was the best compliment he ever heard.
“Are you ready?” He asked, cocking his head to the side and jutting his thumb towards the door.
“Hold on,” you murmured, and he paused in place. For a moment, it felt like you were five years younger, seeing him in his dark suit, hair hanging a little longer, a light in his eyes you'd almost forgotten. You couldn't remember the last time you'd seen it.
You had to bite down on the inside of your cheek, stop yourself from telling him he really did look handsome and feeding his ego as your hands reached up to adjust his tie.
How you used to back when things weren't so…hard.
The ride to the gala was torture.
Trying to hold yourself together and act like you didn’t notice a thousand little details about him. The subtle bounce of his healthy leg, the way his hand kept drifting closer and closer towards yours in the backseat, how he kept trying to discreetly steal glances at you. Making small talk about the kids and the economy and what new reforms he was pushing to pass.
A far cry from the guy who’d been taking bribes a year ago and lazily slapping his signature across bills a year ago.
He sounded like he had before he had taken the office. Almost optimistic.
Hoping for a better world, you guessed – one he thought he could create.
But it was the bad kind of nostalgia when you made it there, the twinkling lights and the big bright room filled with people you hated. Usually, you would try to slip away, excuse yourself for a drink or the bathroom just for the chane to breathe.
Tonight, though, Satoru’s hand refused to leave your back, his gaze constantly returning to your face no matter who he was speaking to. Your stomach was cramping though, nerves bouncing around when he had to stand up in front of all of them and give some grand speech about strength at the start of the night, fear you hadn’t expected coiling tight with the worry that someone might show up to finish what they started and you’d end up a widow instead of a divorcee.
Everything here was centered around him. Senators and congressmen, anyone with pockets they hoped he’d be filling, all came up to congratulate him, wishing him well, asking how the two of you were holding up together.
“Are you okay?” Satoru murmured as you watched one of them walk away, leaning down so his breath was warm on your skin. Reaching over to fix where your necklace had gotten crooked, moving it into the proper place as you hesitated over the answer. “You seem-”
“It’s a little claustrophobic in here,” you hummed, your dress clinging tighter than it had an hour ago, the tag scratching at your skin as you scanned the crowd, wondering if you would finally get your chance to see a certain someone.
Was Suguru around here somewhere? Schmoozing with the dickheads and downing a champagne glass?
“You want some fresh air?” He offered, concern flecked in the pretty colors of his eyes.
“I think I’ll just get a drink,” you shrugged, looking back around at the number of security agents stationed at different points around the room. A lot fucking more than there had been at the last one of these dumb parties he dragged you to. But you guessed that was sorta to be expected when the president had taken two bullets at a public event.
Someone else started walking up, another old man you could never remember the name of.
Satoru kissed the top of your forehead, lips gently pressing just above your brows as his hand slipped off of your back. “Grab me one too?”
“I don’t think you’re supposed to mix your pain killers with alcohol," you dryly admonished him, arching a brow up with a small sigh. He had ditched the cane tonight in favor of standing in one place and sitting when he could, trying to portray an image that not even an assassination attempt would break him.
“Fine,” he automatically gave in, leaning in to sneak another kiss on your cheek. “Whatever my wife says.”
The title didn’t harbor as much hurt as it used to.
And despite how much you wanted you to pretend it didn’t affect you, that he didn’t anymore, your chest felt all fuzzy and warm as you pulled away from him to start towards the open bar.
The alcohol didn’t help.
Sipping on a pretty glass of something strong, letting all those mixed feelings swirl around your stomach as you studied the people milling around. Your husband was already swarmed, people trying to shake his hand and clap his back while he wore a practiced smile, nose scrunching up when he laughed. It didn’t take long for him to be blocked from your sight entirely, only wisps of white and flashes of blue breaking through as you finished your drink and debated on asking for a second one.
Cologne you hadn’t caught a whiff of in forever wrapped around you as you felt his presence before you saw him there.
“I was worried you wouldn’t-”
“I need to ask you something,” you preemptively cut him off, dropping your voice down to a soft whisper as you glanced back over your shoulder to make sure no one was paying attention to the Vice President sliding up to the First Lady.
“Can it-” Suguru started, and you had to force yourself to interrupt him, to get the question out while you still had the courage. Sneaking a glance to your right to find his familiar frame standing tall, dark hair hanging loose over his broad shoulders. His features were tight as he searched your face, dark circles etched underneath his eyes as his fingers anxiously tapped the bartop. It was obvious he was stressed. Bending under the weight of the world he’d been carrying for Satoru.
“Were you there? The night Satoru first cheated on me?” You heard yourself ask, not totally sure what you would even do with the truth. If he was there, if he knew, then what would happen next?
Suguru looked back at you, confusion and something closer to hurt scrunching up on his face before his stare swept back to the rest of the gala still going on.
“Is that seriously what you want to know? What the hell did he say to you?” He hissed back, not looking directly at you, trying to pretend that you weren’t having anything other than a casual conversation. But that wasn’t a denial, was it?
Wouldn’t he just scoff and say no if he wasn’t there? Insist his innocence?
Your lips parted, but then he spotted something.
His face fell in a single second. His jaw went slack, something dark shining in his eyes.
You craned your neck to catch a peek, but the only thing that stood out was one of Satoru’s secret service agents cutting through the cluster of partygoers to speak to him.
“Shit,” Suguru muttered. “I thought we had more time.”
He grabbed your arm, fingers sinking into the soft skin as he dragged you away from the bar and through the closest hallway, digging in deeper when you tried to step back. More time? That was probably the one thing neither of you ever had enough of.
“Suguru, please-”
“We can’t talk here,” he hissed back, and you almost recoiled, surprised at how rough his voice suddenly sounded. His hold was possessive, pulling you further away from the party. Prying into muscles now, tight enough that you thought he might leave fingerprints.
“You’re hurting me,” you murmured, stifling a sound as you resisted his tug. Honestly, he was scaring the shit out of you, but you were trying to trust that he had a reason.
His grip loosened, but not enough for you to break free.
“I’m sorry, beautiful,” he half-whispered, and you realized what it was in his growl. Panic. “But we have to go.”
“Go where?” You asked, glancing back over your shoulder at the dimming lights of the gala. The opening to the hall shrinking with every step you took.
Satoru would-
“There’s a car waiting to take us to a private plane, and-”
You dug your heels in the ground, stopping in place as you took a stunned breath.
“What are you talking about?” You gaped, unable to wrap your brain around what he was suggesting. Still thinking back to the question he hadn’t really answered, Satoru’s words echoing in your head, about Suguru waiting to snatch you, an uneasy feeling sitting heavy inside you, too deep to scoop out. “A plane?”
“I don’t have time to explain here, baby, but we need to leave now,” he insisted, but you couldn’t just accept that. Take the jump when you were terrified to fall.
“What about my kids?”
“He would never let us take them,” Suguru shook his head, and you could only scoff, taken aback as you tried again to move back. But he was stronger than you.
And the rock you were counting on him being, the net you thought was waiting for you, had abruptly moved.
“You want me to leave them?” You asked, breath hitching as you shook your head. Fuck, they were yours, you carried them and birthed them and held their chubby fingers when they were babies and baked their birthday cakes every year. Maybe they were whiny and impulsive and stuck with the same DNA that made Satoru who he was, but you loved them. And maybe him still too.
“If you don’t-”
The red dot of a scope being lined up was suddenly on his chest.
“Down on the ground,” some deep voice shouted, three more dots popping up before you had blinked.
“Let go of the First Lady,” someone else grunted, but Suguru tried to pull you back towards a blinking EXIT sign. But you could hear the noise out there too, the loud footsteps and muffled voices screaming that he was already surrounded.
That it was already too late.
“What’s happening?” Your question was drowned out by the spectacle, heart straining inside your chest and threatening to break through your ribcage as you realized it was a fucking SWAT team.
It took you a few painful seconds to figure out what this was. What you’d been caught in the middle of. They were arresting Suguru. Threatening to fucking shoot him if he didn’t release you, blow his brains out in the middle of a gala against gun violence.
“I didn't-” Suguru started behind you, your attention flicking around too fast to focus on anyone, starting to hyperventilate as Suguru held you like he was scared of what would happen once the connection broke. As if it was the last time he'd get to touch your skin.
“You’re being arrested in connection to the attempted murder of-”
“Don’t trust them,” Suguru insisted in a panic, trying to pull your attention back to him, your head swiveling around to catch one more glimpse of his beautiful face. His eyes bleeding into you, the pretty slope of his nose turned up as his starry stare begged you to believe him. “I promise, I didn’t-”
Someone else was grabbing you, pulling you back before he could finish.
“Get your hands off my fucking wife,” Satoru growled, your back pressed against his chest, an arm around your waist, each second somehow adding more distance between you and Suguru until you realized he was leading you away. Picking up pieces from the mess unfolding in front of you, snippets of the shouts, shattered still images your brain was struggling to process as Satoru let his best friend get put in cuffs for trying to murder him.
“No, no, he couldn’t-” Your voice broke. You were pretty sure you did too.
Watching a man you thought you might love get forced down on his knees, hands behind his head as he argued as he got arrested.
“An agent just filled me in,” Satoru murmured in your ear, stroking your hair softly, trying to cushion the blow as he held you back. “He was seen on surveillance footage meeting with their suspect and handing him cash. They got the guy in custody yesterday. I guess he confessed to everything.”
“Suguru's your best friend,” you gaped, grasping at straws, refusing to believe he could be capable of something like this. “He wouldn't-”
“What?” Satoru snapped. “Fuck my wife?”
Your lips clamped shut, but not before a tiny broken breath escaped. Tearing your stare away from the sight of Suguru being dragged out that back entrance he was about to take you through to look back at your husband, not sure what you were supposed to think or feel anymore.
Did you really not know Suguru either? Cursed to have terrible taste in men?
“Why wouldn't he want me dead?” Your husband continued, cocking his head to the side, cold blue eyes burning with barely concealed hurt. He threw a pained look back in the direction of the guy who once grew up with, the one who’d been there before you, a tight grimace on his pretty lips before he spoke again.“He'd get what he always wanted. My presidency. My wife. My whole life.”
He turned you around so you had to face him, face this, softly rubbing over the sore spot on your arm where Suguru had grabbed you, the gesture surprisingly soothing enough that the last of your resolve dissolved.
Satoru pulled you into his broad chest, his chin resting on top of your head as he supported you through the broken sobs racking through your body.
“Did he do it because of me?” You asked out loud through your tears, body trembling in his arms as he held you tight.
“No, sweetheart,” he attempted to comfort you, but in between the betrayal and the disbelief and the jagged edges of your grief, guilt was blossoming.
The next few minutes were a blur, secret service agents surrounding both of you as they helped you cut through the confused crowd and return to where the bulletproof car was waiting outside, someone passing Satoru a thick folder on the way out – one he appeared to be expecting.
You weren’t numb. But the whole thing felt like a dream sequence, dazed as you played your supporting role of the lady being escorted away from the scene.
“What is that?” You asked, even though you had your suspicions. Could guess what you would find if you peeked inside. Proof.
“I skimmed over some of it right before they, well,” he cleared his throat, handing it over before leaning over to buckle your seatbelt for you. “You should see for yourself.”
It was ironic, wasn’t it?
Desperately craving the truth only to flinch when you found it?
Reading through the files they compiled, the surveillance photos, the fucking lovelorn letters they found when they got a search warrant for his apartment a few hours away – the one he used to take you to, where he’d whisper into your skin and wish for a future you had told him was foolish. Where you could be his without anyone else intervening. How many times had you told yourself it was just the sex talking? That he didn’t really mean it. Lied that all you were both doing was venting frustrations and helping the other one heal.
All you’d done was make him worse.
Feed into some grand delusion that Satoru had stolen the life that should’ve been his – made him feel like his hand had been forced.
Every dirty detail laid out in their plan from the confession they obtained from some creep named Mahito, your eyes dragging over the transcript while Satoru’s hand rested reassuringly on your thigh.
Suguru had forked over a ridiculous sum for him to shoot Satoru. Got him an unregistered firearm. A security pass to blend in. All the information he needed in order to execute your husband in front of the entire country. In front of you.
He just hadn’t picked a skilled enough shooter, you supposed.
All in the name of your affair.
Although, he hadn’t admitted it to his accomplice. Hadn’t told him why he wanted him to commit treason.
No, you supposed that was a secret that was only shared between you, your husband, and the man you no longer knew if you loved or hated.
You didn’t even realize it when you got back.
Clutching onto the folder, Satoru supporting you even when he was struggling to keep up his own weight without his cane, surrounded by agents who led you safely back inside. For once, it was oddly quiet. Maybe it was the side entrance they ushered you through, but the halls were practically vacant, like it had been arranged for them to go work in different parts so you wouldn’t be disturbed making it back to your room.
And for the first time in a long time, you were thankful Satoru was there as you stepped in a space that suddenly felt too small, too suffocating.
How were you supposed to breathe when everything had fallen apart?
“It’s my fault,” you murmured, dropping the folder down on the dresser. The picture it painted had been clear enough.
Your assumption he wanted a more serious relationship hadn’t been all that off. But you hadn’t seen him spiralling into obsession. Never considered that maybe, he’d been looking at you far longer than you were looking at him. That maybe everything had been in motion before you were even married.
Reevaluating every single moment of your friendship with him, from the day you met him through Satoru and he gave you that sly smirk of his while you shook his hand to how he held your fucking newborns in the hospital while Satoru went to grab you food.
Was it real? Fake?
Maybe Satoru was right. Maybe Suguru had been waiting to set him up from the start.
“I should’ve seen it,” Satoru murmured, leaning down to press the faintest of kisses to the tip of your shoulder. You stood still, bottom lip quivering as one of his huge hands settled on your hip. “I shouldn’t have let him-”
“I had sex with him, and he tried to kill you,” you scoffed, a fresh tear rolling down and threatening to mess up your probably already smeared makeup. “I told him things. About us. About you.”
The sort of stuff that would sink his presidency if it came out in a confession.
Things that probably pushed him closer and closer to the edge of a cliff until he felt like he had to make a choice for you.
It was him or your husband.
“I know,” Satoru murmured. “But it’s not your fault.”
You shook your head harder, his fingers dipping deeper into your hip to hold you steady. “I-”
“If I’d taken better care of you, if I had just been there the way I should’ve been, then none of this would have happened,” he added, remorse bleeding into every wound-tight word.
You couldn’t come up with a reasonable response.
Nothing fit right. All your feelings were too big, unraveling into one tangled ball where you couldn’t discern where the regret ended and the shame started. Unsure if the line still existed between love and loathing.
You had sex with Suguru because you wanted to hurt Satoru.
And now you were hurting so much you’d do anything to get it to just stop.
“What did he say to you?” He asked, and your stomach did another somersault.
“I think he wanted me to run away with him,” you admitted. A plane to who knows where, fake passports probably made, the last step of a plan he knew was failing. His last chance to actually steal you if he couldn’t become president.
“Oh,” Satoru exhaled. You could hear it in just a single syllable that he thought you would have accepted. Taken his offer.
“I wasn’t going to go,” you whispered. Even if the SWAT team hadn’t showed up, you would’ve chosen him and your children.
Satoru turned you around, readjusting his grip on your hip, his stare slicing through every shield you spent so long building.
And then he kissed you.
Not one of those shallow, barely-there ones saved for public appearances. But hard, hungry. Making up for lost time. His teeth bumping into yours, his tongue desperately trying to slip inside your mouth and claim it again. Wash away the fact Suguru had been the last one to do it.
He only broke it when you needed air.
“Satoru,” you sucked in a small breath, a hard lump forming in your throat you knew would be too tough to swallow as your nose brushed against his. “Do you seriously think there’s still a chance for us? After everything-”
“Aboslutely,” he murmured, apparently still capable of being annoyingly confident. “There’s nothing in our way now.”
He dragged a thumb underneath your eyes, wiping away your mascara as you blinked up at him. And maybe you couldn’t say it out loud, but your hands trembled and reached up to do something you used to cherish. Slowly loosening his tie for him, tugging it out and tossing it over his head.
Satoru smiled, and you remembered how easy it was to let your life revolve around it again.
He pulled you closer, your chest against his, his hands slowly tracing long patterns up-and-down your back, across your waist, far softer than you were used to. In the past, he’d been more like a starving dog, pawing and squeezing and ready to rut into you like an animal.
“Everything will be perfect once my presidency is over,” he promised, craning down to allow his soft lips to skim across your throat.
You once put your entire life in his hands. Stood in front of all your friends and family and said ‘I do’ because you were so sure that he was the one. Could you do it again?
“I’ll buy you a new house.Wherever you want,” he hummed, punctuating every few words with more gentle pecks. “By the beach. Another country. Get a pool. The kids won’t care if we fly out their friends a few times a year.”
“I don’t want a new house,” you murmured, rolling your eyes as he kissed. You missed your old one. Technically, you still had it, but you only really went back to it for holidays, or occasionally on birthdays. Where you had painted the rooms together and picked out furniture from catalogues and stores. Where you had taught your kids to walk and talk, their heights measured on doorframes. The place that still held all your favorite memories.
“I’m sorry,” he placated, another affectionate brush of his mouth over your damp cheeks. “Tell me what you want.”
“I don’t know anymore,” you whispered.
“Do you want this?” He asked, delicately tracing over your side in your tight dress. “Me?”
A handful of months ago you would’ve huffed at him. Said never.
And yet, you were slowly nodding. Biting your lip as you broke, gave into the inevitable.
It really was till death do you part, you supposed.
“I do.”
Satoru stripped you down until you were just wearing your jewelry. A diamond ring. The glittering necklace around your throat. The ones dangling from your ears. All signs of who you belonged to.
Standing bare in front of him, slowly taking off his suit jacket before slowly unbuttoning his crisp white shirt, your fingers slightly shaking as you pulled off his belt and fiddled with his zipper. He had to sit down to get them off, the muscles in his legs twitching as he got them off. The puckered scar on his calf making you wince, another reminder of how fucked this all was.
Another faint one on his arm, healed better, a different shade of white on his pale skin.
“I-”
His mouth was on yours before you could apologize again.
It only took him thirty seconds to have you on the bed.
Body pressed into the sheets, his hands spreading you open before he buried himself between your legs.
He kissed the inside of your thighs, savoring the plush flesh, before planting himself right above your sensitive clit, aching to be touched as much as the rest of you.
“My pretty wife,” he hummed, his breath hot as it drifted over the neglected bud. “Been missing you. This.”
White lashes fluttering as you hesitantly took the plunge, but rather than freezing water, cold disappointment, Satoru was warm.
The clouds were clearing so your sun could shine again.
Sure, the sky was still stormy, scattered with dark spots, but you no longer felt like you were standing under the downpour.
Satoru was shelter. Safety.
You shut your eyes, letting your hands feel the scruff of his hair, the strands sifting through your fingers as his own started to slip inside you. Testing the waters himself, seeing how wet you were for him.
And embarrassingly enough, you were already soaked.
Thighs tense as he sank inside your heat, trembling as he tenderly began to stretch you out. He still remembered every sweet spot. Where to push, how to pull you apart, what the right amount of pressure was to have you falling apart – and for him again.
“Just let go, baby,” he purred, tugging at some loose thread attached to your heart simply by thrusting his fingers in deeper. Asking you to let go of Suguru. Sweeping against your walls as you weakly sucked him in, scraping what was left of you back together to form something new. “Let me take care of you.”
“S-S-” You couldn't even manage a syllable.
Squirming as he offered comfort in the form of sex. Stopping you from sobbing or splintering by turning all your sounds into breathless moans, broken whines you couldn't hold in. Had no space left inside you anymore, nowhere for any of your feelings to go except the air when your husband had two fingers stuffed deep.
He slotted a third finger inside you, your hips wiggling as you tried to move back, but he didn't let you budge, keeping you still with his free hand pressed against your stomach just below your belly button.
“I just want you to be all mine,” he dreamily murmured, dragging his fingers out and back in, his nose grazing against your clit before he moved his mouth just over it. Lips lingering there like he wanted you to ask for more. Resisting the urge to tease and taunt, to sink his teeth in and tear. Doing his best to be delicate.
“W-what happens if I say I am?” You managed to ask, back arching up off the bed as his taste buds dragged over that tight bundle of nerves, sparks raking down your spine.
“I'm never letting you go,” he whispered, wrapping his lips around your clit like he could prove it if he just made you cum. Showed you that he could fuck you better than Suguru did.
His jealousy wasn't discreet.
It was in the way his fingers dug into your skin a little deeper, how deliberate every swirl of his thick digits inside you felt, making sure you wouldn't miss a single touch, the constant desperate glances he'd take, peering from between your thighs to watch your reactions.
In the things he didn't ask.
Was he wondering how you had done it with his best friend? If he made you cum harder? Faster? What positions you preferred with him?
Some sick piece of you still hoped he was thinking that.
You didn't give him a real answer.
But you were losing the ability to think of one once he started painting practiced circles over your clit, hyper aware of how close you were to cumming as your toes curled tight.
“Toru, it's too-” You cried out a protest, but you didn't really mean it. Didn't make it through the sentence without cumming hard on his hand, squeezing down as he coaxed you through your climax.
“Too much, pretty?” He teased, falling back into old rhythms like it was second nature. Taking back his place in your bed, in your pussy, like both had always belonged to him. “Too little?”
You made some strangled sound, gasping as you started coming back down only for it to turn into a desperate whine the moment he pulled his fingers back out.
“You’re too much,” you complained, but there was no more venom in your voice.
“You married me,” he wryly said, his greedy gaze soaking in the sight of your slick pussy after he played with it.
“I did,” you muttered back, swallowing your disappointment although you were sure a sliver reached the surface.
“I really am sorry,” he apologized quietly, his stare shifting up to hold you captive. “For everything. I'll spend the rest of my life saying it if I have to.”
It didn't make it all okay.
Or even equal.
But you guessed you each had your own burdens to bear. Consequences and decisions you had to live with.
“I’m sorry too,” you whispered, unable to catch your breath as he climbed completely on top of you. One arm planted next to your head, keeping you caged in, his other hand cupping your cheek as he wiped away another tear you hadn't realized fallen.
“Stop thinking about him,” he murmured. “It’s just us now.”
Forever.
For better or worse.
And when he angled his cock at your entrance, you just wrapped your wrists behind his neck, cradling him close as he buried himself in the crook of your collarbone, you told yourself you needed him. That he could save you. Solve this. Nose nuzzling against your neck, inhaling your perfume while you toyed with his hair, glancing down to watch the first few inches slip in, the pretty pink head of his cock disappearing into your warmth.
Reminding you of every ridge, molding you again to his size, shaping you around him once more.
“Fuck, fuck,” your husband hissed, sucking a rough mark on the inside of your throat like he was trying to stop himself from snapping. You could feel the clench of his jaw against your skin, his nose scrunching up, the muscles in his back getting all tense as his hips kept sinking down. “Feels like heaven, angel.”
He fucked you like he was the devil.
Dragging you under, down down down into the flames, burning desire searing through every nerve ending and rewiring your synapses until you couldn't remember how you got here.
Okay, perhaps that wasn't totally true.
But you could ignore it.
“Forget about everything else,” he whispered into your ear, breathing hot and heavy as he split you open, snugly grinding against your womb as your hips shifted under his weight. “Jus’ focus on me.”
Did your focus ever really shift anywhere else?
Had your world revolved around anything but him since the first date? The first time he kissed you and called you his? When you had sex in the back of his car and he called you the most beautiful girl he'd ever met?
You believed every line back then.
And here you were, about to believe him again.
Your heart throbbed. His cock did too.
Satoru lifted up your hips, readjusting to dig his knees into the mattress, to get more leverage to start pounding into you faster. It wasn't mean, or even rough. Just, calculated. Controlling the angle, the pressure, measuring what face you made when he hit those sensitive spots he previously memorized.
“Nothing fuckin’ compares to you,” he groaned, the lump in his throat bobbing hard as he paused with his tip practically smushed against your cervix, staring down at the sight of you sweating and panting under his muscled frame.
And not that you wanted to make your own comparisons, but you had to admit that sex with Satoru was nothing like it was with Suguru. Familiar guilt gnawing at your bones as you remembered how hard you tried to feed the awful emptiness inside yourself by letting Suguru fill you up himself.
But it was something only Satoru could touch.
He was leaner than before, you guessed from stress, or how ragged he’d been running himself.
Maybe you’d need to put in a request for him to be served more food at your family meals.
You let one of your hands drift down his chest, feeling the outlines of thick muscles, the defined ridges and divots. “You’re not eating enough.”
He grinned, abruptly dropping your hips back onto the plush mattress as he reached up to move a sweaty strand of hair out of your face. “Is my beautiful wife worrying about me?”
“N-no,” you lied, sucking on your lower lip as you felt his cock twitch, so stuffed you didn’t think you had any more room for him.
He laughed, light, airy, one of those sounds that made the room feel brighter.
And then he was rutting into you faster, desperation etched into every breath, every creak of the bed, felt in his fingers and his touch.
Craving you guessed he couldn’t deny any more either.
“Tell me you love me,” he groaned, a hand wrapped around your throat, not hard enough to hurt, applying the precise amount of pressure to make it difficult to breathe. Sucking in shallow inhales, your nails dragging down his shoulder blades as his cock throbbed inside of you. “Please, I'm begging, say you still love me.”
You wished it was just the sex that made you say it.
But you were clutching onto him, taking every thrust as the headboard banged into the wall, nodding as much as you could with his palm pressed against your throat.
“I do,” you whispered. “I love you.”
It didn't matter what you wanted. How hard you fought it.
Some things were just facts.
“I love you so fucking much,” Satoru promised back, kissing you as his other hand drifted down to grip the underside of your thigh, pushing it up higher to get a deeper angle.
Filthy squelches echoing in time with the bed creaking, the mattress dipping under your combined weight, in-and-out, in-and-out, your body on the brink of unravelling all over again.
There was admittedly something filthy in the fact your husband was about to drag another orgasm out of you just from how hard he was fucking you, your thighs preemptively tensing in anticipation as he threw his head back and dug his thumb in deeper on your throat.
Dragging his cock along your walls, so full you were pretty sure he managed to lodge your heart in your lungs, unable to suck any air in when your pussy was preoccupied sucking him in.
You didn’t know which one of you finished first. Falling apart into each other, his cock throbbing, thick, warm ropes of cum filling you up as white stars splotched your vision. And when you opened your eyes, there was just more white, his hair dangling down in your face as he let go of your throat to reach down and rub your clit instead, to help get you through your second, intense climax of the night, shuddering hard in the sheets as you clawed at his back for purchase.
He didn’t pull out.
Let you scratch his back, like he’d take any mark you left on him.
Satoru just kissed you again, sucking softly on your bottom lip, soothing you as his hands found new positions. Caressing your cheek. Holding your waist. Your arms awkwardly settling over his shoulders, his hair tickling your face as you made some distant mental note to tell him to go get a haircut soon.
Damp cum leaking down your thighs as a sudden thought struck you about twenty minutes too late.
“Satoru,” you breathed your husband’s name, unable to sit up or squirm with his heavy weight keeping you pinned to the bed. “I’m not on birth control right now.”
You were before, but with the assassination attempt and the safehouse, and then moving back, you’d forgotten to ask someone to pick up your prescription for you. Just slipped your mind when you were too stressed to think about having sex.
And now here you were, stuffed with your husband’s cum, sticky and damp as his cock throbbed and leaked out the last drops, your throat threatening to close up while he shrugged his broad shoulders and snuggled up closer.
“I’ll have someone pick up the morning after pill for you,” he murmured. “But you know, maybe, a baby wouldn’t be so bad.”
“You’re not funny,” you mumbled, wiggling just for him to let out a low moan. You’d done the whole pregnancy and chasing after children thing in your twenties. Knew that it would be harder now, that everything was. Especially now that you had no clue how long he’d be limping for, or if he’d always need a cane now. It wasn’t that you totally hated it, no repulsion or disgust simmering under the surface, just some of your rationality finally returning. You could get like, a cat or a fish, if he wanted something new. “You could’ve died. Do you think now’s the time-”
“Maybe not now,” he hummed. “But I’m not going to be president forever.”
You blinked, your fingers reflexively reaching up to brush his hair back from his face. Looking into his eyes and trying to decide if this was really what he wanted. If you were. And then he was craning his neck down, capturing your mouth in a gentle kiss before breaking away.
“I’m always going to be your husband.”
“Good morning, gorgeous.”
Satoru didn't really want to wake you. If it was up to him, he'd spend the entire day like this. Your cheek squished on his chest, your bare body tangled in the sheets with him. Watching you start to stir, sleepily blinking up at him as your palm tried to press off his shoulder to sit up.
But he held you down, kept you close as the morning sun streamed through the window. “We can stay in bed a little longer.”
You were worth the risk of being late to a meeting or two.
“Satoru,” you said his name, a hint of caution still bleeding through your tired voice. “Last night, we-”
“We can take this slow, okay? Work on us,” he murmured, stroking your hair softly as he didn't say the last part he was thinking out loud. Without Suguru to interfere.
He finally had his fucking life back.
His wife.
“Did you mean everything you said?” You yawned, letting him draw faint shapes on your skin, your eyes fluttering shut as you started to drift back into your dreams.
“Every word,” he softly said.
His back was sore, leg already throbbing before he even moved. Throat dry from the sounds you ripped from it. But his chest felt warm, completely content for the first time in fucking years now that you were next to him again.
You made a small sound, a little mmph, but you rolled over, off of him to squint at the time on the alarm clock, reaching out to turn it off before it could even ring.
“I’m never letting you go,” he added quietly. Soberly.
Not now. Not ever.
“You should go to your morning meeting,” you mumbled, rubbing your eyes. Turning over on your side to stare at his side profile. Your finger slowly reaching out to trace over the slope of his nose, over the edges of his mouth, across his jaw. “If you promise to be back for lunch.”
He leaned in to kiss the tip of your own nose, almost groaning at how good you smelled. How much he missed this.
But there wouldn’t be another morning that he’d go without it.
“Pinky promise.”
You helped him get in the shower, scrubbing the sex and sweat from his body before he awkwardly yanked his pants up and popped a pain killer. Listened to you talk about maybe taking the kids somewhere for an actual vacation after his term was up, suggesting foreign beaches and going sightseeing as he smiled and nodded along. You even let him kiss you goodbye, a silky robe tied around your waist as you leaned out the door to watch him walk down the hall.
But still, he didn’t mind doing his job.
He had a duty after all.
Sitting in the Oval Office, reclaiming his chair as people surrounded him with problems only he could solve.
Everyone was ignoring the elephant in the room, the absence that could be felt, or rather seen, in the newspaper on the table. The photograph of the man who was no longer vice president.
His former best friend.
While another old one was sitting on the couch, his chief of staff just blankly waited without making any notes for once, only watching as other members flitted in-and-out.
Nanami glared at him after everyone else left, the door thudding shut as the two of them were left alone.
Satoru was used to it, but it still caught him off-guard when the blond spoke up, “I’m resigning.”
“Why?” He blanched, almost laughing at the absurdity of it.
Things had never been better. Approval ratings were through the roof. News stations were already covering the story, Suguru’s face splashed across every headline as people speculated about his plot to become president.
“I know what you did.”
He chuckled, leaning forward in his seat as he cocked his head to the side. “And what, exactly, did I do?”
“Who do you think he came to when he started to suspect something was off about his security detail?” Nanami interrupted his poor attempt at feigning innocence, standing up and smoothing out the wrinkles in his pants.
“Well, it's not your problem or mine, anymore,” Satoru dismissed it, waving his hand as he resisted scoffing. There was no plea deal or bargain left for Suguru to make.
His guilt was predetermined.
And Satoru had no plans to pardon him.
Nanami took a few steps towards the door, and Satoru pressed his palm on his desk to brace himself to stand. His left leg was uncomfortably stiff, a dull ache radiating across the injured limb that he doubted would go away any time soon. The scar was ugly, something that admittedly pricked at him more than it should, but he supposed it was a small price to pay to have you back.
Besides, he always liked listening to you scold him, to give you a reason to pay him a little extra attention. Peace of mind to know that while Suguru was staring at concrete walls, he got to watch you fawn over how much he ate and how he was healing.
“What are you going to do about it?” He asked before Nanami could reach the door.
“Nothing,” Nanami muttered, pausing to let out an exhausted exhale. “That’s why I’m quitting.”
“You’re not even curious why?” Satoru asked, nose scrunching up.
“I assume it was because he had sex with your wife,” Nanami dryly replied. “Although, I admit I don’t fully understand how you did it.”
“The hardest part was finding someone who looked enough like Suguru,” Satoru snickered, running his fingers through his grown-out hair, missing the soft buzz of his undercut. But he wanted to be what you liked. Who you liked. For now, at least, until you remembered all the reasons why Satoru was superior.
Nanami huffed, like he couldn’t believe him.
“It’s funny how easy it is to get people to do what you want when you pay them enough,” he vaguely added, limping around to lean against his desk.
Kenjaku was a bit of an asshole, but he looked enough like Suguru that anyone watching the surveillance footage of their meeting would assume it was him especially when it was coupled with Mahito’s confession, there wasn’t much the real one could do when he didn’t have an actual alibi. No, he’d been too busy sneaking around with you, bringing you to his place that didn’t have security cameras to record your affair with his phone shut off to save himself from being framed.
He doubted that you’d remember the exact date of the last time you slept with his best friend. Wouldn’t be able to recall that you were the only person who might be capable of clearing him.
Suguru had sealed his own fate.
Nanami opened the door a crack, jaw clenched tight as Satoru contemplated what his price would be.
“I'll need a new VP in the next election,” Satoru hummed, watching Nanami’s brows scrunch together before he sighed. “Position's yours if you want it.”
“No thanks,” Nanami grimaced, but Satoru simply shrugged. He couldn't exactly blame him given what fate had befallen his former VP. Rotting in a high security prison cell for the crime of fucking his wife. “I think I'm going to move to Malaysia.”
“Yeah?” He arched up a brow.
“You should think of moving on too,” Nanami coolly suggested, standing up and straightening his tie. “Don't run for reelection.”
“The nation needs me,” Satoru scoffed. And he'd be damned if he let his mark on history just be rumors of getting impeached and an attempted assassination attempt.
“What about your wife?” Nanami challenged, as if he knew anything about the two of you.
Nanami wasn't married. Didn't have a partner.
He didn't understand.
Marriage meant sacrifice sometimes. Support. Satoru wasn't about to make the same mistakes again. You wouldn't slip away from him this time. He would do everything right.
Suguru would be stuck with a life sentence.
And Satoru would get everything he ever wanted.
“She loves me.”
reblogs + comments are always greatly appreciated even when it's cringe <3
top 5 (technically 15) jjk writers but no one asked
jujutsu kaisen only..
literally no one asked for this but I hope some accounts get more recognition from this.
this is NOT in order from how much I like the accounts this is just a list of accounts
top 5 writing accounts
@sukunahs - has some genuinely heart wrenching and amazing stories. sukuna x reader focused. writes everything and anything its amazing and I love them. (I'd recommend reading To Distant Lands. it made me sob)
@madamechrissy - I have cried to her fics more times then I'd like to admit. amazing at writing smut, fluff, angst. basically a jack of all trades. (reccomend reading Pour It Up, super interesting premise and very well written)
@5yzygy - another sukuna centric blog, mostly writing smut, but ofc they write angst and fluff too. great vibes all around BE CAREFUL IF YOUR ADVERSE TO REALLLYYY FREAKY STUFF(nothing ilegal)
(recommend reading Someone Call HR read the tags before you read it... you have been warned)
@blkkizzat
literally on the same freakquency wavelengths... I love it so much. not afraid to go into full details, and I love that in my writers
(recommend Make Me Sweat, Make Me Water genuinely made my mouth water...)
@gwonty
a relatively small catalogue but absolutely NO MISSES... can y'all tell I'm FREAKED OUT yet??
(recommend self sucker!gojo part 1 is good but it really just sets up for the masterpiece that is part 2)
smau writers (4)
@thebussyinspector
FREAKKKAYYYY smaus. if you wanted sub- jjk men(I do) they will provide. pegging CENTRAL
@poptherox
actually so underrated they cook SOOO goddamn hard.. I love their pre- hidden inventory yeaner gojo smaus
@bluebaerie
technically not JUST smaus but that's the main focus of their content
@saintkaylaa
makes smaus for like a millionnnn different fandoms hehe. angst hurts
5th is in next category
smaus AND regular writers (6)
@nanaslutt
currently on semi-break. smaus are 10/10, fics are appropriately kinky
@reignpage
honestly take a day off to read EVERYTHING on their account... NO MISSES.
@caramelluxe mootie
hella funny smaus and COOKS when she writes
@bluukive
is superrr creative and writes stuff ive never seen other writers touch
@retiredteabag
healthy mix of written and smau, noooo nsfw!!
@coralbae
another just genuinely good writer with a large variety
i hope these creators don't mind me tagging them :'(
random question time! I’m looking for a multi chap jjk fic!! I love your writing but have read most of your works! have you got any similar in mind? I’m open to reading most jjk men!
a few long fics that i think are incredible:
what you know by @starmapz (a MUST read for sukuna girls)
brat by @kunareads
sweet tooth by @sukunahs
i love you i'm sorry by @softtashoney
specific creators who have great longer fics you can look through:
there's way more but this is just what's off the top of my head. my other recs can be found by searching my blog for #indiesrecs but here's a link with some of my other recommendation lists too!
Synopsis: What’s supposed to be a fun party at sea with your friend quickly turns into a living nightmare. You become the only human aboard, hunted by two beings that lurk just underneath the surface.
Note: ty to a special commissioner!!!
(Warnings; death of a minor character, smut, obsessive behavior)
Her grin is bright and heavy as she continues to drag you up the ramp, onto the boat. Sometimes, you wondered if Cali ever stopped smiling, but you knew that was impossible. She was bright and sunshine. Her yellow sundress and sandals were a stark contrast to the night, starry sky.
She giggled when you wobbled the moment you stepped onto the yacht. You cling onto a rail, steadying yourself, feeling the boat rock along the waves.
“Again,” you say for the nth time, “are you sure it’s okay for me to be here–”
“Seriously, shut up.” She tells you, “You saved me from failing, I want you here.”
You try to smile, but it comes out shaky.
Cali grabs your hand again, dragging you past the creaky boards and bottles of soda. You’d never been on a yacht before, but you could instantly tell the person who owned this was swarmed with cash. The yacht had two decks, and you were sure there was another floor underneath the hull. Despite the vanity, the speakers were blasting a song that did not speak ‘rich and graceful’. People were lounging around the luxury like they’d been there a thousand times. Someone had smashed a bottle of vodka on the deck. You ambled past the broken glass, keeping up with Cali’s steps. She barely even glanced at the sheer extravagance. It made you wonder how often she’d done stuff like this, to the point where richness is normalized for her.
Socially, college wasn’t going too well. It’s already your third year, and your friends are few in number. You know it’s you. You’re too off-putting, too strange.
Cali’s the only person who’s really stuck with you. Throughout this semester, she’s like a spot of sunshine in your life. You value her friendship, so even though going onto a boat out in the middle of the ocean doesn’t really sound like fun to you, you’ll tolerate it for her.
Someone calls out her name. Cali waves, before she’s dragging you over. He’s tall, good-looking. You spot the watch on his hand. Expensive. He is expensive.
“Didn’t think you’d make it.” The stranger looks at her, his eyes crinkle.
She giggles, flicking her curls over her shoulder. “Why wouldn’t I? Oh—“ She turns to acknowledge you, giving your name. You give a shy smile to the man.
“Nito,” he returns, “Nice to meet you.”
His name sounds familiar.
“Oh, isn’t this your—“
“My dad’s,” he corrects, with a secret smile, “I’m just ‘borrowing’ it for a while.”
You try to smile back, hoping he doesn’t realize you find him pretentious.
“Which he does, all the time.” Cali laughs, before wrapping an arm around your shoulder. “This one’s my plus one. Literally the only reason I was able to pass chemistry last semester.”
“The only thing I did was make you study.” You tell her, but you’re smiling at the praise.
“Yeah, and my major thanks you.” She responds. “Anyway, y’all should get to know-each other. I’m gonna be right back.” She tells you. You immediately panic.
“What, where are you—“
“I gotta’ find Ikail, okay? Don’t worry, you’ll be fine by yourself. People here are super nice.” With that, she turns away, already strutting off, completely abandoning you.
You would have offered to go with her, but you know what she and Ikail were going through. Their ninth breakup, you think? You still weren’t too sure of all the details.
When you turn back to Nito, he’s giving a sympathetic smile.
“First time getting ditched?” He asks.
You glance awat. He laughs.
“I wouldn’t worry about it. Cali is the type of person to be everywhere, yknow?”
You did know. Cali is a butterfly, hovering from bush to bush, never quite stopping. She thrives off of the social energy, the vibrancy of humans.
“Yeah,” you agree, “she is.”
It’s silent a little more. Finally, you ask.
“So, do you know how to steer?”
“What?”
“The boat,” you say, “the yacht. Do you know how to…drive it?”
“Oh, nah.” He laughs. “Way too complicated, but don’t worry, the guy up there is a pro.” He points to the cockpit. “We’re gonna be fine when we hit the open waters.”
You blink at him.
“What, seasick?”
“It’s not just that,” you say, looking out in the open water. Pitch black. There was no moon up tonight. “Won’t it be…dangerous, going that far out?”
“Not really.” Nito responds. “I mean, who else would be out there but us?” Nito’s smile is still plastered on his face. You’re starting to feel more and more like a puppy who keeps stumbling over their feet.
“You kinda’ remind me of my dad.” He finally says, “he was always so uptight about going out in the ocean at night. He never liked that the pier was so close to Innsmouth.”
“Innsmouth?” You repeat.
“Yeah, it’s some ghost fishing town, a little ways north of here, I think? Heard of it?”
“I think so?” You say, but it’s doubtful. “It sounds a little familiar.”
“Maybe it’s still on the maps.” He shrugs. “But yeah, my dad hates that place. I mean, it creeps me out, but he’s a little dramatic.” That cracks a tiny smile out of you. He notices.
“What about you?” He asks. “Got family?”
You think for a bit. Your mother was long gone. Your father left before you were even born. Uncles and Aunts appeared sporadically throughout your life.
You had a grandmother, but she wasn’t there anymore.
“No one close.” You respond.
He nods. “I get that.”
You fight the urge to bristle. No, he doesn’t. He lives under his daddy's money, showered with watches and luxuries. He doesn’t get it. None of them do.
You stop. You calm yourself down. You shouldn’t get mad at him, or anyone. Nito may be a little spoiled, but he’s a nice kid. He was sitting here, talking to you, even when he didn’t have to be.
There’s movement. You jolt forward, ever so slightly.You catch yourself on the rails.
Oh, the yacht was moving.
It’s subtle, the only reason you stumbled was because you were already unbalanced. You watch as the gap between the pier and the boat get wider and wider. Water sloshes against the hull. The water is black, blacker then the night sky. An empty, endless, void.
Nito glances down at his phone.
“They missed it.” He tells you, referring to his friends. “Guess they’ll just have to wait until we get back.”
You nod, but you have the strangest feeling that those friends of his were the luckier ones.
𓆝
You still hadn’t found Cali.
After twenty minutes of more stilted conversation, you finally managed to break away from Nito. Rather, he broke away from you. He was called over by a few other people, and you weren’t too keen on following.
Instead, you took your time mapping the yacht, walking over to the desk, investigating. It was bigger than you initially thought. Rather, there were plenty of distractions.
It wasn’t really a yacht. It was more like a mini cruise. It was one of the biggest watercrafts you’ve ever been on. There were two separate floors, each having a deck of their own, minus the cockpit. Truly impressive.
The people. They were everywhere. You suddenly remembered why you were so adverse to parties and clubs. It was so loud. The music boomed and rumbled the deck. Somebody was screaming their head off. It made you want to find Cali even faster, keeping close to someone you’re familiar with might be your only way of getting through this night. Besides, the only reason you’re even here is because of her.
Something catches your eye, distracting your search.
Two people are lounging right by the deck. A girl and a boy, talking secretly to each other. You watch as she stares up at him with a growing smile on her face. He’s getting closer too, slowly leaning over, tucking a loose curl behind her ear.
It’s so intimate. You shouldn’t be looking, but you can’t help yourself. It’s so natural the way they mend with each other.
You can’t understand it. You’ve never experienced anything like that before. Love, relationships, and sexual human contact have always been foreign to you. You couldn’t imagine doing something like that, being vulnerable with someone.
Life was just…existence. You never made many friends, nor did you hang out with very many people. You went to classes, and then you went home. You always felt different compared to other people. And yet, like other humans, you craved that feeling of connection. Somewhere to belong.
You’re swallowing back your envy, letting it sit in the back of your stomach like it always did.
A familiar trickle of laughter catches your attention.
Cali’s giggles filter through the warm air. Her voice sends waves of relief up your spine. You just needed a tiny bit of familiarity right now.
She’s nestled in the middle of a group of people–her friends. They’re all lounging around the deck, chatting amongst each other. She’s sitting on Ikail’s lap, arms loosely curled around his neck.
You feel awkward just lingering there. She hasn’t spotted you yet, but you find the will to cement your heart. Cali insisted on everyone being nice. You trusted her.
“Fuck Simeon.” One of her friends groans. “He’s the type of professor who never gives A’s. Good luck with him, babe.”
Cali is tossing her head back in an exaggerated groan. “Great, I’m screwed then. I don’t know anyone who’s taking him next semester.”
Ikail nudges her shoulders. “Hey, where did your friend go? You two came together, right?”
She shrugs. “No idea. Left Nito with babysitting duty.”
You can feel your heart sink, but you’re willing yourself to ignore it. It was a joke. Friends make jokes, right?
“Dude.” One of her friends chides. “You can’t just bring a newbie in and ditch! That’s like so shitty!” From the way he laughs, you know it isn’t sincere.
“They’ll both be fine…maybe,” Cali says. “I dunno’ I just didn’t wanna leave the poor thing all cooped up in the dorms…sorta’ felt like leaving behind a puppy or something.”
You stop listening after that. You retreat further back into the yacht, ignoring the laughter and Cali’s muted words of “Still stan though!”. You can feel tears well up in the corners of your eyes as you push by the swarming bodies and rumbling music.
It was so loud, everything was too much. You just want quiet.
Somehow, you find your way below deck. People become less and less. Nobody cares about you, ignoring the way your hands are buried into your face, and you think you prefer that. You don’t want anyone to notice you, not as the way you are.
Eventually, you stumble into someplace quiet and dark and dim. You breathe in. You breathe out
As your ever loyal friend, loneliness responds. She creeps up your shoulders, draping across your skin. The tears drip down more freely within the arms of her embrace.
Cali was right. You aren’t anything more than a puppy, mindlessly following at her heels, begging for a crumb of attention to war with the loneliness. If anything, you were a blubbering fish, that keeps following the school, only to realize your fins are too slow to keep up.
You should be grateful she even gave you the time of day. Why were you so upset when all she said was the truth?
You curl up in a ball, your light only a dim artificial flicker. The music upstairs is nothing but a distant rumble. The sounds of the ocean drown it out.
𓆝
When you were younger, you loved the water.
You loved swimming. You loved feeling the cold chill shoot straight up your spine. You’d dive down just enough to feel your ears pop, until your lungs started to burn for air. You loved the animals. You loved the dragonflies zipping about the green cattails. You loved watching the frogs hop hop hop across lily pads. You loved seeing turtle heads bob up and down the current.
You loved the water, but you loved your grandmother more.
Every summer, you would go into the rural countryside to visit her. She was on your maternal side. She was a frail thing. You never once saw her without that wheelchair or the large blanket that covered her legs. She lived alone in that large mansion right by the lake. You never met your grandfather.
You only ever saw her once a year, and yet, she was the only one who could ever bring you out of the water.
“Fish!” You heard her call for you. “Fish! Where are you?”
You peek out from the lake, catching your grandmother’s wheelchair just by the bank. She hadn’t seen you yet. You were young, mischievous. You can feel your heartbeat quicken as you creep close, careful not to let her spot you until you want her to.
“Boo!” You yell, popping up right below her.
She smiles, her face beautifully aged.
You frown. “You weren’t scared.” You huff.
“Why would I be afraid of my little Fish?” She asked. “Come, come. Lunch is almost ready.”
Reluctantly, you stand up from the lake, letting her drape you in the towel she brought before she leads you back inside. She smiles even more at your silent tantrum.
“You remind me of when I was younger.” She tells you, face adorned with adoration.
“Do I?” You ask. She hums.
“I’d like to give you a gift, little Fish.”
You gape, eyes large and wide and excited.
“A gift?” You repeat, wildly looking around her wheelchair. “Where?”
She laughs. “Patience.” She tells you. “Soon. I have a feeling you’ll like it.”
𓆝
You wake up with a start.
You hadn’t even noticed you’d been asleep. How long even were you out for? Hours, judging by the crust you feel in your eyes, the slight drool on your bottom lip.
Remnants of your dream filter in and out. That was really odd. You hadn’t dreamt of your grandmother in months.
But were they dreams or memories?
Something just then catches your attention.
It wasn’t something. Rather, it was the absence of something.
The music was gone.
You couldn’t hear anything. No music, no footsteps, no voices.
You pushed your feet up. Had the yacht returned to the pier again? Had everyone left already? It was far more realistic to assume everyone was passed out drunk. But the silence still confuses you.
You can’t explain it, but the silence is different from anything you’ve ever experienced. Off. It’s more like a pause than an actual absence. Like the calm before the storm.
It’s so dark. It’s the only thought you have as you start to climb back on deck. You can hear the creaking of the wood as the waves crash against the ship.
When you get on deck, the only light you have is the moon. It casts a sickly glow against your skin. Just a couple of hours ago, the yacht was filled with sound and color and light. Now, it’s dark and dim–a ghost town.
But not abandoned.
They were there…just…standing.
You recognized some of their faces. The party goers. Some were Cali’s friends. You even spotted Ikail somewhere in the crowd. They were all crowded around the edge of the deck, just waiting there, facing the water. Still.
You glance at their faces. Nothing. Every emotion was wiped clear. They barely even blinked.
Were they all high? Some type of drug you’d be too much of a coward to take anyway? You can’t look at their faces for too long. Something about it unnerved you. Instead, you hesitantly tapped a girl on her shoulder.
“Hey,” You whisper. “Are…are you okay?”
That’s how you miss it. It’s so quiet. A hum that slowly grows louder and louder.
She doesn’t respond. You shake her, trying to wake her up from her trance.
“Hey.” You try to say as seriously as you can. “Seriously…this isn’t funny.”
The hum reverberates in your ears. You feel like a fly is buzzing right by your face, but no matter how hard you try, you can’t swat it away.
She’s moving then. You watch her take one foot forward, then another.
She falls off the boat.
You barely hear the splash before another one joins her. Then another. The hum is shaking the yacht, almost bursting your eardrums as more and more continue to fall. Instinct is taking over. You reach out to grab clothes and hands and legs all to keep them from just…following. But it does nothing. They slip out of your grip like eels.
You don’t know what’s going on. You can’t understand it, and the hum is making it too hard to even think.
But you recognize Cali’s yellow sundress.
You’re grabbing her arm before you can even think, stopping her from jumping to her death.
“Cali.” You beg your friend, the only person who ever got close enough to betray you. “What the fuck are you doing?”
She hesitates, like she’s snapping out of it. When she turns to you, her eyes are glimmering with tears.
“...Help.” She’s begging, but she’s getting stronger and stronger as the hum continues. You’re losing your grip. “Please help.”
She yanks her hand away and then jumps.
There’s no screaming. You think that’s the worst part. No one is screaming or dying or drowning. There’s just a splash of corpses hitting the water. And then, you’re all alone.
The hum stops. There’s silence again.
You can’t even breathe. You can’t even scream. People just died in front of you and you didn’t do a damn thing. Mass suicide, the word pops in your head, but it doesn’t feel right because Cali’s eyes were glimmering with unshed fear. It was like someone was forcing her body to do that.
You don’t know why you did it. Morbid curiosity. Like watching the remnants of a car crash, seeing the blood splatter all over the pavement, and still not being able to look away. You lean forward, expecting to see bodies drifting on the surface, the dead staring right back at you.
Nothing. There’s absolutely nothing in the pitch black waters. It’s as though the sea had swallowed up every remnant. As though it never happened at all.
You knew better. You knew what happened. You knew what you saw. You knew–
There’s a head. And then, another.
At first, you think some people survived. Your heart leaps in your chest, and you’re about to wave and yell when you stop because you realize they aren’t human.
Human eyes don’t glow like that.
Two purples. Two blues. Both pairs fixed on you.
The hum starts again. You don’t move.
And then they start to screech.
It’s loud and disorienting. You’re fumbling back tripping on your feet, and you move further and further away from the railings. Shelter, it’s the only thing you can think of. You need to find shelter. You need to get away from the sound because you know they’re trying to call you somehow.
You’re ducking below deck, falling over the stairs, and creaking floors as the screeching continues. Another joins in. You’re barreling past empty barricks and into the corner you crept out of. You’re slamming the door shut, locking it behind you because you can swear you hear thumping and scraping as you clamp your hands against your ears.
“Leave me alone.” You beg. “Please, please, please leave me alone.”
Nothing listens. You don’t know whether you fell asleep or passed out.
𓆝
When you open your eyes again, it’s morning.
Sunlight is streaming from the sole window you have. You’d fallen asleep crying. You’d been doing that a lot lately.
You don’t blame yourself. Considering what you just went through, it’s enough that you kept your sanity.
It’s almost mocking how peaceful everything looks the second you step out of your sanctuary and onto the deck. The sun has already risen high into the sky, it must be closer to late morning than early. It’s bright, with the sun shining cheerfully above you, without a care in the world. The sunlight warms your skin. There are barely a few cloudy whisps in the sky. Around you, the sea is friendlier compared to the night before. She moves around like a giggling temptress, but you know better than to trust those waters.
There was no sign of shore in front of you. Behind you. To the left. Or to the right.
You walk until you hit the railings, looking as far as you can. Not even a glimpse of land. You were floating on a boat, in the middle of nowhere.
People had to be looking for you, right? A whole bunch of college kids can’t just disappear without people looking for them. Parents must have already been notified. The Coast Guard must already be trying to track you down.
But even if anyone found you…how could you describe what the hell even happened?
There’s a chirp. You glance down at the water.
A face stares up at you.
It’s not as scary out in the day. You peer down at it, just as it studies you. You only caught a glimpse of it last light, but the details shimmer in the sunlight. Its hair was white, almost translucent, barely contrasting against pale skin. The glimmering blue eyes resembled more like jewels than the glowing monstrosities from last night.
When you search for its counterpart, you spot it almost immediately. It wasn’t trying to hide, but it was lower in the water, purple eyes trained on you. It’s hair was more natural, a deep dyed black that was long, drifting and swirling around like black ink. It’s eyes were sharper, but the jaded amythysts were just as brilliant.
They would look human if it were not for the fins tucked right behind their ears, giving them away immediately. The etherealness is only something inhuman that would carry with it.
The blue-eyed one opens his mouth. That familiar screech you heard last night echoes, but it’s drowned by the vibrance of the day.
You flinch, wary, but you aren’t as frightened.
You figured it out last night, at the same time as they did. Whatever power they used was entirely useless on you.
Rage. You know it’s from your adrenaline, coursing through you, having no way of escaping so it’s sinking into your veins, your lungs, burning your insides.
It’s the only retaliation you have.
You raise one middle finger into the air. You make sure they know you’re speaking to them.
“Fuck you.” You hiss, nothing more than an animal yourself. “Go fuck yourself.”
The purple-eyed one sinks lower into the water.
But the blue-eyed one smiles.
𓆝
The spider startles your grandmother.
It’s not a very big thing. Small and dark, skittering along the floor. It scares her all the more. You catch the last seconds of her attack. The arachnid stood no chance against her foot.
She sighs when it’s nothing but a dark splotch against the floor. You frown.
“Wasn’t that bad?” You ask her.
“Hm?” She tilts her head. You point at the remnants of the spider.
“That,” you say, “wasn’t killing it bad?”
She observes the mark for a bit before shaking her head. “No,” she tells you, “it’s not bad. The spider wasn’t like us. So it’s okay to kill it.”
She smiles, reaching over to grip your shoulder. You can smell her floral perfume.
“Did you feel bad for it?” She asks.
You shake your head. “No.”
You felt nothing. Absolutely nothing.
She nods. “That’s okay, Fish.”
“You don’t have to feel bad for things that aren’t like us.”
𓆝
Communication is key.
You needed a phone. A pager. A walkie-talkie. Anything that can get you back into contact with the mainland.
The idea of a radio doesn’t even pop up in your mind until you’re ransacking the cabinets below deck.
There are three accessible floors of the yacht. The lower deck, the deck itself, and then the upper deck. That’s where the cockpit was, as well as the controls, and hopefully a radio.
Nito had told you about the cockpit when you first boarded. He tried his best to entertain you, telling you about his dad and other things.
He didn’t seem all that close with his dad. You wonder how his father would feel about his estranged son killing himself.
Nito was pretentious, but he wasn’t a bad person. He didn’t deserve to die. And Cali. In the end, she turned out to be a pretty shitty friend, but she never deserved to die either. Neither did anyone else on this boat of nightmares.
It was those…things. You don’t know what to call them. Mermaids? Sirens? Stuff that was only supposed to exist in mythology. And now, they’re circling you, drifting around like sharks.
It doesn’t matter, none of that matters.
The cockpit is unlocked and left wide open. You already have a feeling about what happened to the guy who was supposed to drive. You don’t think about it. Towards the side, there’s a radio, as well as a steering wheel. You beeline to the controls.
There were so many buttons and levers. When you prodded around for a manual, you couldn’t find it, but you doubted that would help you. You wouldn’t be able to learn this nearly fast enough.
Instead, you linger over the steering wheel. The engine was turned off. Okay. Easy enough. It takes a few minutes, but turning it on was as easy as pressing that red button.
You push. Nothing happens.
You push again.
There’s a blinking light that catches your attention. The gas tank.
“It’s…it’s empty?” You mutter, smashing the button over and over again. “No, no, no, please. No.”
Nothing. You were dead in the water.
Hope was slipping, but it hasn’t escaped you yet. You scramble over to the radio. You’ve heard that radios rely on a different power source compared to the rest of the boat. You switch channel after channel, flipping each lever multiple times before moving onto the next. Dreaded silence awaits you.
You don’t know how long you've been sitting there, mindlessly pushing buttons and levers, hoping to at least hear some static. Maybe minutes. Maybe hours. You give up just when hope resembles you: thrown out into the current and left floating away.
Standing there in the cabin room feels like wading in poison, so you leave. You stumble down the stairs, back into the cheerily bright day. It’s almost torture seeing the sun shine so brightly. You hated it. You were trapped on a fancy boat with no one to turn to and no way to get back to shore.
You’ve always been lonely, so you should be used to this.
But this, the sheer fear of isolation. You’ve never felt like this before. You’ve never felt so scared before.
“-Go fuck yourself.”
You don’t expect the voice. It startles you out of your spiraling thoughts. You follow where you heard it coming from. It leads you off the boat. You lean over the railing.
The blue-eyed creature is below you.
“Go fuck yourself.” He repeats.
You stare at him, so perplexed that you don’t even register what he said.
“…you can talk?” You ask.
In response, the creature smiles. His mouth is filled with sharp, pointy teeth.
“You can talk!” He chirps.
Ah, you get it. He was repeating what you were telling him. Like a parrot. He didn’t understand.
If you weren’t on the brink of hysteria, you might have found it hilarious that this was the universe’s way of essentially flipping you off.
Still, that ability of theirs. It was unsettling. He’d only heard you say that phrase once, and he’d repeated it perfectly. That ability to mimic was uncanny. It must be how they lure creatures down into the depths, convincing them that they were one of the same.
But the hum is even more terrifying.
You feel remember Cali’s fear in her eyes when her gaze locked on you. She had died terrified.
These things, whatever they were, had the ability to lure and ensare.
….but for whatever reason, you are spared.
The purple-eyed one is surfacing, floating right beside the other one. Now, it’s two against one. You stare down at them, waiting. They look unflinchingly back.
They couldn’t get you. They can’t climb onto the boat; if they could, they would’ve done so already. You were safe for now.
But you can’t leave. There’s no radio or fuel.
For now, you are at a stalemate with these creatures.
When you observe the purple-eyed one, he looks strangely satisfied.
He knows you won’t be going anywhere anytime soon.
𓆝
Escape is impossible, so you play a different game.
You wait.
Again, a group of college kids going missing is bound to attract some attention. The parents, the police, and, eventually, the Coast Guard. People are bound to come looking for you.
You just don’t know if they’ll like the answers.
You still have no idea how you can explain all this. Mass hysteria caused by creatures who weren’t supposed to exist, where only you were left behind?
Why you? You know you’ll get this question. You can already feel it linger on your skin like molten lava, burning your flesh in its ire.
Why you? Why were you the only one left behind? Why were you the only one unaffected? They gnaw at your heart, because you don’t know the answer.
You don’t know why you were spared. You weren’t special of any kind. You were normal.
If anything, you were under normal.
You didn’t have friends. You didn’t have family either. Nobody would miss you if you were to suddenly disappear into the murky depths. No one would mourn you. There wouldn’t even be a funeral.
And yet, you still lived on while countless others, others who had lives of value, were taken. You lived. Even when all you’ve tasted these few years was loneliness, you still wanted to keep living.
You think of Cali’s face. The fear in her eyes. She didn’t deserve that. None of them did.
You try to feel sympathy.
You can’t.
𓆝
Despite the yacht’s size, there aren’t many resources.
There’s alcohol. Lots of it. You aren’t a fan of the sight or the smell and you have half a mind to just toss them overboard. There’s a half-eaten sandwich you have too much pride to consume; there’s also pizza, which you gobble up rather quickly.
Thankfully, there is running water, but considering you are stranded, you don’t know how long that will last. Apart from that, there are a few cans of beans and other non-perishables. There are a few bottles of Coke and Pepsi that remain unopened–saved for a rainy day.
You don’t know how long you’d be stuck out here, so you gather all your items close and hoard them away.
There’s a rather interesting find when you try scoping out the cockpit again. You hadn’t noticed it on your first run, too preoccupied by your desperation for escape. It catches your eye this time, however.
The metal glints in the sunlight. You rotate the crossbow once. Then twice. You test the throttle, lightly tapping on the lever.
You keep it close. Safety on, but you keep it with you.
You know your biggest danger out here isn’t dehydration, nor is it hunger.
The creatures have still not left the yacht.
You rarely peek out, but you can hear them. They want to be heard. You can hear the splashing of fins and hands. There’s clitters and chirps that sound eerily human. There’s also voices. They have this annoying habit of repeating phrases they heard you say. As though they’re trying to pretend they’re human, trying to lure you out of safety.
You don’t get why they bother to stick around. You clearly aren’t an easy meal. Why aren’t they leaving you alone to go find easier prey? Their lure doesn’t work on you.
Or maybe. It isn’t the kill they were eager for. Maybe it’s the hunt itself. The kill was just a sweet reward.
It’s a terrifying thought: an animal replicating something so human.
That’s why you don’t interact with them, despite your safety being so high up. That’s why you don’t mock them any further than you already have.
You don’t want them to be even more motivated to get you.
Still, you don’t expect the things.
The fish is still alive when you notice it. It’s flopping around the deck, its gills opening and closing. You’re confused by it’s appearance because the yacht is feet higher than the waters’ surface. Still, you take pity on the poor thing and toss it overboard.
It’s flung back just a few minutes later. Partially injured.
The cogs are starting to turn. You don’t know what it means, but you want no part in it. You fling the fish back.
The next time the fish returns, it’s dead.
This time, you don’t just toss the fish back overboard. You study it. It’d been killed rather quickly, a single slice across its neck by something sharp. Was this a warning? A foreshadowing of your own fate?
Or is this their way of trying to feed you? Fattening up their prey so they get a hearty meal.
Regardless of the answer, one thing was made very clear: the fish was an offering of some kind.
You cannot accept it.
For the first time in hours, you face them. They’re lingering by the ship, watching your every movement as you hover over the railing. You dangle the fish in the air before you drop it back into the water.
“No,” you say as firmly as you can.
Despite their humanoid structure and nature, you treat them as animals. Dangerous animals. You maintain eye contact, you make slow movements so you don’t instigate them.
“No?” the blue-eyed one repeats. You’ve noticed he’s far more vocal than the other one.
The other one is happier with just watching. Always watching. He’s far more unsettling than his counterpart.
“I don’t want it.” You say, but it comes out as a waver. “So leave me alone.”
He’s not human, but the blue-eyed one is so expressive. You can see the way he purses his lips like he’s thinking, mulling your answer over.
There’s no more fish after that, so you think they get the message.
You’re proven wrong a few hours later.
The first one is pretty innocuous. It’s the splintered remains of a seashell. You’re quick to sweep it up and toss it back but then another keeps coming, and then another, and then another.
The first was a large, spiraled conch shell, aged with green algae. When you toss it back, it’s replaced by a smaller clamshell, pearly white and tinged with a blushed pink. Then another. Then another.
There are other things too. Sea glass of all colors is tossed onto the deck. More fish are tossed up, at one point, so is a whole urchin.
Eventually, they settle on more human-made items.
Waterlogged watches, dead phones with cracked screens. You can just imagine them swimming across the seafloor, snagging anything shiny and firm underneath their grasp.
Some things make you hesitate. The jade comb looked well-loved and coveted. The delicate necklace that made you wonder how it survived thrashing about against the strong current.
“Stop it.” You say, regardless, pushing them off board. The items fall right beside the blue-eyed one. He doesn’t make a move to catch them.
“Don’t want?” He guess.
That’s another thing you don’t like about these creatures. They learn way too fast. You’d only spoken a few sentences to them, and yet they’re already starting to assign meaning to the words. It’d be fascinating if the dread wasn’t pooling in your belly.
He titters when you don’t respond. You’re about to leave when you hear a new voice.
“What want?”
You freeze. It’s the other one. The always silent one. Always watching.
He tilts his head. He doesn’t repeat himself.
“Leave me alone.” You say. It’s barely a whisper.
He doesn’t respond.
When the sun dips below the sea, you can hear their screeching start all over again. You take your refuge from the darkness, descending below deck. You sleep in one of the beds, keeping the crossbow beside you at all times. That’s how your first day at sea ends.
More days pass. You try to establish a routine. You try to feign monotony so your brain can pretend everything is under control. You clean things that don’t need to be cleaned. You read books you have no interest in. There’s a calender in one of the upper cabin’s. You use it to keep track of the days, it’s something you do to keep yourself sane. Sometimes you simply sit up in the cockpit, admiring the way the sun reflects off the calm waves. You search the skies for any sign of rescue.
Sometimes, you find yourself watching them.
You know you shouldn’t, but you can’t help it. You promise yourself it’s just a peek, but these creatures have fascinated humanity for centuries, and to see myth turn into reality is something not even your fear can overcome.
They linger around the yacht but the brief seconds they lose their focus on you are the moments you cherish. You’re able to watch them freely, without the wariness of something staring right back.
The black-haired one is longer than the other one. His skin is dark, not like he has more melanin, rather in a way where it looks like stone has touched his skin. It’s a grayish color, adding to his uncanniness. From the brief glimpses of his tail, you can see that it’s slender, more lithe. Like an eel, almost. The way he moves across the water, sending tiny ripples through the waves, careful not to disturb, it’s almost like a snake.
The white-haired one is larger, bulkier. He looks like the moon blessed him. His skin and hair and scales all look like silk–as though you could see right through them, right into his bleeding heart. His white scales glimmer and flare out. He travels through the water as though he wants the whole ocean to see him. You’re reminded of the grace a betta fish has.
But, they have those moments. The more you watch them, the more you see.
You’ll spot them in the water as they gently circle each other, tails and fins turning around and around, both enraptured in a dance only they knew the movements to. It’s so easy to see from the way they look at each other. This was something more than friendship, more than companionship.
Mates. The word etches itself into your mind the more you look onward. Bound together, forever.
In those moments, that same bit of loneliness starts up again, consuming you whole. You never watch the end of their dances. You can’t bring yourself to.
The offerings continue. More shiny things whose value is useless this far out to sea. More shells. More sealife that had the misfortune to come across those creatures.
In one particular instance, a large octopus nearly hits you on the face as it comes crashing onto the deck. You remember screaming so loudly, you must have broken the sound barrier as you shoved it off the deck with a broom, back into the ocean.
You know it was a gift from Blue because of the way he laughed. You had half a mind to jump down there and teach him a lesson, but Purple was already on it. He dunked his mate’s head underwater, scolding him with a chittering hiss.
Blue learned his lesson. No more poor sea life found its way onto your deck after that.
As much as you were reluctant to admit it, you were slowly starting to know these creatures.
Blue was a lot more outgoing. He was a lot more eager to test out your language, trying you lure you to the railings with phrases like “Come here! Come here!” (he must have heard you saying that from the time you tried to coax a seagull). He resembled a puppy with the way his face always seemed to brighten every time you made an appearance. Yes, he was a puppy, if said puppy was larger than you and could kill you within a moment’s notice.
Purple preferred to stay in the background, but he never strayed too far. He was less likely to speak, far more willing to talk in his native tongue, only his mate could understand. He also very rarely interacts with you directly, but you like that he’s willing to berate Blue if he goes too far: whether it’s a gentle tug back and a hiss, or a far more violent brawl.
They fight. They hiss. They bite. It never looks malicious, and it’s more of a correction than anything else. It still scares you, making you scuttle back when they start drawing blood.
These days, the fighting doesn’t seem to be as intense. You often wonder if it’s because of you.
At night, they start the screeching, and you use that as your cue to descend below the deck, ready to sleep the night away. You’re not as scared of it as you once were. At this point, you were starting to differentiate the differences within their sounds. The hum was something they used for prey. But the screech…actually, you still weren’t sure, but it wasn’t for food.
Even though you’re reluctant to admit it, you’re getting used to them. That’s dangerous.
It meant you were lowering your guard, forgetting that these were apex predators.
It happened on the tenth day.
When morning arrived, you went upstairs and saw your usual sights: the deck littered with coins and shells.
As always, you collect each one and throw it back overboard. The yelp makes you peek over. Blue is hovering above the water, gripping his head with his hand. Ah, you must have accidentally hit him.
“Don’t be so close to the boat, then.” You chide him before gesturing to Purple. “Why can’t you act more like your mate?”
Blue gives a saddened trill. He sounds more offended than hurt, if anything.
So far, all the ‘gifts’ have been given by Blue. Purple hasn’t given anything yet, at least from what you can tell. He seems more than content to let his mate toss whatever trash he can find. You’re glad for it; it’s not like you want double the amount of stuff to clean up.
“Don't want, too?” He asks, holding the shell you threw back.
“No.” You say, firm as ever. “I don’t want anything you throw up here.”
He seems to ponder your words.
“No…throw?” You repeat. You glance down at him, wondering if he’s finally starting to get it.
“Yeah.” You agree. “No throw.”
He pushes himself back towards his mate. Blue switches back to his own language, tittering about with Purple. You can’t make out what they’re saying, but Purple doesn’t seem too happy.
You ignore them. You have your own problems to focus on.
It’s been more than a week, and yet no help has arrived. Supplies were getting low. You’re not sure how much longer running water would last. You’re getting desperate enough that you’re half debating on burning the yacht down to send some kind of signal. You’re not a big fan of causing an ecological disaster, but at this point, you’re willing to do anything.
You want to get back home. You want to get back to your boring life. A life where no one cared for you and no one was looking for you.
But why?
Genuinely, what’s waiting for you back on land? You have no friends. No family. You’re a speck of human, lost in a crowd of millions.
You don’t matter there.
But it’s the only thing you ever knew. A bird that has gotten so used to its cage.
You’d do anything to get back because you don’t know what’s waiting on the other side.
You’ll just have to do better, you tell yourself. People think you’re weird, you’ll make them see past that. You’ll make friends. You’ll create lifelong bonds. You’ll be better.
You just want to survive.
Hours pass with that resolve. Something odd is happening below the yacht. Blue has yet to throw anything since his last interaction with you. There’s no chittering or calls for your attention. And yet, they’re still there. Hovering around. Every time you peek over the railings, you catch the two in mid-discussion, faces serious.
You will force yourself to ignore it. You ignore them and the growing pit in your stomach.
𓆝
There are a few times when your grandmother gets quiet. Gone is her cheery persona. She sits by the window, overlooking the lake. You sit right next to her on the floor, leaning up against her wheelchair.
“Why are you so sad?” You ask her one day.
She cracks a smile at that, glancing down at your small figure.
“I’m homesick.” She responds.
You don’t understand that. You glance around at her house, the mansion that was given to her by her late husband, acres and acres of land.
“But we are home.” You insist.
She shakes her head.
“No, Fish.” She tells you. “It’s not home. Home is far away.”
You don’t understand, you peer up at her.
“If you miss home, then why did you come here?”
You think she might berate you for asking that, but she doesn’t. Instead, she laughs.
“Because…I wanted to. I followed him onto the sand. And now…” She trails off, you wait her her to say something more. She doesn’t.
“When I go home, will you come with me?” She suddenly asks.
You smile up at her. There’s no hesitation.
“Yes!” You declare. “When are we going?”
She laughs, pinching your cheek.
“Patience, Fish.” She tells you with adoration. “I’ll go first, but you choose if you want to follow.”
𓆝
You walk up to the sound of metal collapsing.
Your heart’s racing as you bolt upright, wide awake. You’re barely thinking as you shuck off the blankets as you hear another scrap of metal, then another, then another.
You stumble out of the cabin, nearly tripping over your own two feet. Something catches your foot. The crossbow.
You’re grabbing it without a second thought, hoisting it up on your shoulder.
It’s a blood moon tonight. The water, the deck, and the yacht are all bathed in red. The water looks especially violent, thrashing about, hitting the boat in more volatile ways. The sea is angry. She is hungry and vicious.
You think you know what she wants.
Another metallic screech. The lack of light makes it hard to see where it’s coming from. The sound echoes across the water, making it sound like it’s happening in all directions.
Hordes of them. You can almost imagine your tiny boat being surrounded by hordes with sharp teeth and claws, and scales. The delicate metal in the yacht was being flicked away like paper. Your boat, made of cards, instantly collapses underneath you.
You’d be torn apart limb from limb from limb from limb until there’s nothing left.
You can’t check the water, you’re too scared to see if you’re right.
You don’t have to wait long.
A single hand shoots up from the edge. Then another.
And then something massive is hauling itself up.
You can’t hear your heartbeat anymore. You can’t hear the waves. Everything went silent.
Even underneath the dim light of the moon, he is gorgeous. His white hair has been tinged by the red light. His pale skin glimmers. His fins flare out and then retract all over again.
When he smiles, the song of death plays.
“Come here.” He tells you.
Your hands tighten on the crossbow. He’s dragging himself closer.
Realistically, you could outrun him. If your feet hadn’t given up completely, you could have fled down below the deck, locking yourself away.
And yet, you don’t. You can’t.
“Stay back.” You’re telling him, only managing to take one step back, then another.
You feel like you’re in a dream, no matter how far you want to run, you’re movements are bogged down by fog.
“Stay back.” You’re pleading.
“No hurt.” He tells you, words soft and calm.
He’s not listening. He keeps smiling, coming closer and closer. There’s something clutched in his hand.
He’s not listening when you point the crossbow at him with shaky hands.
“Stay back.”
He’s not listening, not until you pull the trigger.
Your hearing comes back. The sounds of the waves, the creaking of the boat.
The dripping of blood, splat splat splat on the deck.
His head tilts downward, angling his head to gaze at the harpoon lodged in his lower belly.
“Ah…” he trails off, looking at it. “...hurt.”
You drop the crossbow. It clatters by your feet. You’ve killed him. The thumping of your heartbeat is right by your ears.
Just as he pulls it out, you collapse onto the floor.
It’s a sickening sound. The flesh clings to it. There’s a hiss, a scrunch on his face, before he’s pulling it out and tossing it to the other side. There’s so much more blood now. It gushes from his belly. The red grows and grows.
Your vision blurs.
You were crying again.
“Stay back, please stay back.” You beg. “Please leave me alone.”
He’s dying, and yet he still follows. Closer and closer. You clamp your eyes shut when something lightly touches your calf, then thigh, then you. Something wet sinks into your shoulder.
You’re sobbing as something wraps its arms around you.
“No, sad.” His voice is unsure around the words. Imperfect. “No? No, sad.”
If this were death, he was kinder than what you thought he’d be. If this were death, he felt warm on your skin. If this were death, his hair tickled your shoulders.
Your sobs and sniffles die down the more you feel him. He’s pushing you further into his chest. Your clothes are getting soaked by the water and his blood. You’re dwarfed by this creature–A creature of fables and legend.
And then, you can hear him. It’s low, deep in his throat. It’s not the hum. It’s not the screech. It’s a song. A song with no words or rhythm, or lyrics.
He sings to you, softly rocking you back and forth in his arms.
You close your eyes, thinking it’s something she would’ve sung.
𓆝
Hardly anyone comes to her funeral.
You stand with waterlilies bunched in your hands, the ones you handpicked from the lake. You’re the only person there, hovering beside the open casket. She hardly had any family left. The ones who could attend had already left. You were the only one who truly stayed behind.
You study her face, lined with graceful wrinkles, evidence that she had lived. Her eyes are closed, as though she were just sleeping. As though if you were to call for her, she would rise up with a smile and a ‘yes, my little Fish?’
She still called you that, even when you were 18, about to head off to university. She never stopped, not until she was forced to.
Your eyes linger up and down her body. Her dress has been moved. It trails up, ever so slightly. You push it down, making sure it hides her ankles.
Maybe you were just imagining it, but the birthmark on her foot…they almost resemble scales.
You never went near the water again after that.
𓆝
You wake up to sunlight dappled on your cheeks.
It’s barely sunrise. You’ve never been up this early. The sky is splashes of orange and red, and pink. The sea is quiet once again. All you can hear is the rolling crashing of waves.
You’d fallen asleep sitting upright. Your back is leaning against a wall. In front of you, your legs are splayed. A familiar tail is wrapped around them. White, shimmering scales.
Iridescent, the answer comes. Iridescent that borders on blue.
There’s a soft trill above you. He’s already awake, jewel eyes open and breathtaking. Do these things even sleep? You weren’t so sure. And yet, you strangely aren't perturbed by the idea that this creature spent the entire night staring at you.
You’ve never seen him up close before. His face is too perfect to ever resemble humanity. There are sharp, angular lines on his face. The fins at the sides of his face flare and contract, and you wonder if it has to do with his breathing.
You should be afraid. You’ve spent days being afraid of them, but a whole night passed with one of these creatures holding you in their arms. And you were so tired of being afraid.
“Hello.” You say.
“Hello,” Blue repeats, ever eager for communication.
When you reach out, you expect him to flinch. Instead, he leans into your touch, melting into your fingers as you trail them down his face. It’s not human skin, there’s something firmer that gives ever so slightly.
He catches your fingers in his own. They’re larger than yours, with claws and webbed at the base. Still, you let him press your hand back into his cheek, keeping you with him.
It’s the least you could do, considering you shot him last night.
How could you forget? With a start, you check his abdomen. There was so much blood last night, there’s no way he could’ve survived that. How was Blue even alive?
There’s nothing. Not even a scar.
Had you imagined it? That can’t be. There’s dried blood all over the deck, and all over your clothes. How could he heal so quickly?
When you glance back up, he’s trilling and purring, entwining your hands in his.
What do you feel like for him? What do you look like to him?
Blue seems to have a realization of his own. His fingers leave your hands, and he reaches behind him. You remember he was holding something when he first came onto the boat. He pulls back your hand and drops something into your palm.
It’s the shell you threw out last night.
“No throw.” Blue tells you rather proudly.
The shell wobbles in your hand for a moment before it clicks.
He thought you meant you wanted him to give it to you personally, not keep tossing it overboard.
That entire night was all over this? You observe the shell. It’s pretty. A delicate piece of artwork crafted by the sea. It wasn’t worth that much pain and blood.
“I could’ve killed you.” You tell him, unsure if he understands or not.
“Want?” He asks. “Keep? Keep?”
You stare at the shell. You don’t know what it means, but you’re sure you’ve been damned already.
“Yes.” You agree. “I’ll keep.”
He chirps, nestling his face into your neck and you wonder when you started to let these creatures touch you so freely.
There’s another trill. You recognize the voice. Blue does too.
He’s giving a call of his own before he slips away from you, back over the railing. You hear him enter the water with a splash.
Still clutching the shell, you peer over the deck.
Both mates are reunited. It’s a heartwarming sight. Blue is eagerly chattering away, most likely telling Purple what happened last night. From the look of Purple’s souring face, you can tell he isn’t liking any of it. He seems more mad than worried, and you wonder if being shot isn’t that big of a deal to these creatures.
Purple catches your gaze just then. You say nothing. Neither does he.
His eyes soften, ever so slightly.
𓆝
There’s a shift in the coming days.
You no longer avoid the creatures. You don’t hide when they pop up in the water. You don’t immediately block them when they try to make conversation with the limited words they knew. There’s an effort on neutrality on your part.
In turn, they stop pretending they were so helpless.
Apparently, they could always get onto the yacht, but they held back for your sake. Now, that you’re less wary of them, oftentimes Blue and Purple have propped themselves on the deck in the mornings, letting their tails dangle off the boat. You let them be, going about your daily routine.
Now that you’re no longer so afraid of them, Purple seems to be a little more open to communicating with you. He tests out your language, but for whatever reason, it sounds foreign when it leaves his lips. You wonder why they sound so different; maybe within their species, there are subspecies.
You share things with them. Just as they tried to give you gifts of the sea, you, too, try to give gifts of yourself.
There isn’t much food, nevertheless food that’s actually enjoyable. You have to make do with the chips and canned vegetables you find in the pantries and closets. It’s your own challenge to make something palatable for yourself.
That particular morning, you settled on a crumbling reimagining of a sandwich. It was edible, but not the most entertaining. The only thing that kept you going was the granola bar you’d found lingering in one of the cabins. You’d saved it at the end for a treat.
A coo comes from your left. You had a guest.
Two, to be exact. Blue and Purple sit side by side, watching you and your meal. You swallow the last bits of the sandwich, feeling the sludge travel down your throat. So dry, you needed water.
But you can’t bring yourself to leave their mesmerizing stares. Their gaze travels to you and then to your granola bar, still wrapped in plastic. It crinkles in your grip.
You wait, and then you think.
“Want to try?”
Purple only tilts his head. Blue leans forward.
Unwrapping the treat, you take out a piece, the smallest you can, before placing it down on a napkin and slowly inching it towards them. Blue is quick to snatch it up. He practically inhales it, you doubt he even had a taste. From his expression, you can glean that he likes it.
Purple watches his mate idly. Not wanting him to be left out, you do the same motions. He retrieves the bar piece, a lot more suspicious about it than Blue had been. You see him tilt it forward, then back.
Blue decides to take matters into his own hands.
He was so quick. You didn’t know what happened until after Blue gobbled it down, looking immensely pleased. Purple’s eyes narrow to slits.
You don’t notice you were laughing until after the two creatures’ heads snapped in your direction.
Your smile dies down. Their gazes are heavy on your skin, you can’t bring yourself to keep looking.
“Sorry.” You mumble.
Purple makes another rumble again, most likely disgruntled that Blue stole his treat. Feeling for him, you break off another piece. You extend it out, forgetting about the boundary.
His hand grabs your wrist.
You freeze. You don’t even think you’re breathing as he turns your hand over. You can feel his claws lightly rake over your skin, but he’s so gentle that it only tickles.
He’s several degrees cooler than you, the difference is so stark that even you can feel it. There’s no human warmth. It makes you wonder what you must feel like to him.
He’s pulling, and your stiff body follows. For a moment, you think he wants to pull you into the water with him, but then his hand slips from yours.
They’re both gone, disappearing back into the sea. You hear a splash, and when you peek over, you can only see remnants of ripples.
There’s another laugh bubbling out of your throat: shaky, nervous, but filled with life.
𓆝
Over time, you notice the differences between the two creatures. Blue is a lot more adventurous compared to his counterpart. Purple is a lot more adverse towards human things, another reason why he must have been so hesitant earlier.
You wonder why he seemed to linger around you then.
You also let them touch you a lot more. Well, it’s not like you let them. Rather, they allowed themselves access to you. Blue would give quick swipes of his hands, scraping them against the pads of your feet before disappearing into the depths below. Purple would be slower, far more aware of your wavering feelings. He’d be slow and gentle when he reached out, clawed fingers brushing against your own, testing the softness of your skin. You get used to it, eventually. You get used to them eventually.
Your fear lessens. You stop assuming the worst whenever they grab your wrists. They’re much akin to people in some ways. Just as predictable and unpredictable.
You still see them as the beings who killed all those humans. Strangely, the more time you spend with them, the less you think about it. As you spend your days here, drifting on an abandoned boat, your ties of humanity slowly melting away in the current, those deaths oddly feel like a spider being crushed by a slipper.
One thing that hadn’t changed was the screech, much to your chagrin. It always started at the exact same time, when the sun would dip into the sea. By now, the noise was more of an annoyance than the terror you once saw it as.
And loud. Terribly, terribly loud.
“Stop.” You tell them on a night when you feel bold enough to peek over the railing. “Just stop.”
Moonlight glitters over skin and scales. At the sound of your voice, their own dispersed into the sea. They both stare up at you with glowing purple and blue eyes.
“Please?” You ask. “I don’t like it.”
Blue looks confused. Purple seems mildly offended.
“No like?” Blue echoes.
You shake your head. They frown, turning to each other before they start their chatter again.
You aren’t an idiot. Clearly, the screech is meaningful to these creatures. Perhaps, if you were more like them, you’d understand. For now, all that noise does is nearly rupture your eardrums.
“Why don’t you sing something else?” You try, in an effort to appease.
They stop again, peering up at you. You watch as a drop of water trails down from Purple’s hairline, following the curve of his cheek.
“The song you sang that night.” You tell Blue. “Maybe, you could sing that?”
He takes a moment, crystal sapphire glimmering against the water.
He starts first. A second later, Purple joins in. Their voices lull and ebb, just like tiny waves pulling and pushing against the shore. You sit down, catching yourself at the railings, letting your feet dangle over the edge.
There’s no adrenaline pumping inside your ears, your breaths are calm and measured. You can appreciate their voices now. It’s ethereal, there’s no other way to explain it. Their voices are captivating that way, enough to make you want to jump into the sea yourself, chase them until you run out of air. Still, you can’t deny how inhuman they sound. The notes hum and vibrate in a way no human could replicate. The song sinks into your bloodstream. You rest your head on your arms, listening to the beauty.
From that night onwards, you sleep outside, on the edge of the boat. Their songs never stop until you’re off into the land of dreams, far far away from them.
𓆝
One day you fall.
You don’t remember what happened. Gravity was all too fast to snatch you from the boat. You land in the icy water with a splash.
You’re frozen. A part of you was screaming to kick and flail and survive. You can swim. You’ve always been a good swimmer.
But terror was all to quick to grasp onto your muscles, keeping you from moving. It’s been ages since you got into the water. Not since she left.
You’re nothing more than a sentient rock, looking up at the surface, seeing the sun slowly disappear from your view, as your vision gets darker and darker. You helplessly sink.
Deeper.
Deeper.
Fingers touch the back of your calves.
Deeper.
Deeper.
Hands on your waist.
Deeper.
Deeper–
And then you’re gasping and coughing as you explode onto the surface. You reach up desperate for anything to grab onto. He obliges, letting you cling onto his figure like a drenched cat.
You cough wildly. He pats your back. His glossy black hair shimmers in the sun. Inky scales keep you afloat.
You stare at the most human part of him–those purple eyes.
“Thank you.” You tell him. He tilts his head.
He should be drowning you. He should be ripping you apart for committing the sin of being human.
Yet he doesn’t. He just stares. His hands continue to hold you, keeping you above the depths.
As of this moment, he’s showing you more humanity than you’ve ever received from members of your own species.
Your eyes are stinging, but it’s not from the salt water.
“Thank you.” You tell him again, and you think he understands, that time.
Just for a moment.
𓆝
Something happened after that day. You sought them out more, the fear waned and waned.
Soon, you’d forgotten why you were so afraid of these boys entirely.
“That reminds me, I can’t keep calling you guys colors anymore, right?”
You were sitting on the edge of the railing, legs dangling off the side. The sun slowly melted into the sea. The sky turned into warm yellows and crisp oranges.
Blue rested his head on your lap. He’d recently figured out that was one of his favorite resting spots. You don’t think you mind. You prefer him using you as a pillow compared to his earlier fascinations with your legs. He was too touchy for your liking, hands drifting further up than you liked. Once, he touched your upper thigh and you were startled enough to kick him right in the head. Purple had gotten a big laugh out of that.
Speaking of, the other one was seated right next to you. You can feel his presence leaned against your shoulder. His mate purrs from his spot on your lap as you card fingers through his hair, mindful of his fins.
“Do you have names?” Weird, usually you ask that before you get to know someone.
You introduce yourself first. Blue repeats it over and over again, as though he wants to etch it into his memory. Purple leans closer into your warmth. Your clothes are thoroughly soaked at this point, but you were starting to care less and less.
They don’t respond in kind. They probably do have names, but you won’t be able to pronounce them. You tilt your head, looking down at the waters below.
“I’ll call you, Satoru.” You say, “And you can be, Suguru.”
They don’t seem to care about their new names one way or another. You don’t really mind. They were more for your sake than for theirs. Satoru merely sinks into your hands, lamenting in the warmth of it. He whistles something at Suguru. It sounds like a taunt.
When you peek over, Suguru’s lips are pulled in an irritated scowl.
With a swipe of his arm, he pushes Satoru off your lap, into the depths below. Satoru flails, but gravity takes him down all the same. He disappears with a splash. You cover your mouth, trying to stifle your laugh.
“What did he say?” You ask.
He shakes his head, ‘You don’t want to know.’ Comes his silent answer.
Below you, Satoru gives a high-pitched chatter, most likely spewing curses and whines at his mate. Suguru ignores them. You follow suit.
The sun dipped further down into the waves. Soon, they’d start singing to you again, just like every night.
This sight would have been unthinkable less than a week ago.
Had it been a week? You’d honestly stopped counting.
You know you should hate them for what they did. They killed your fellow students and left you stranded on a ship with no way of getting to land. Yet, you don’t. It’s not like this boat is any different from your ‘life’ back ‘home’. You were drifting through life, the same as you were here. Nothing changed except for the setting.
And these two…
“Why?” You ask Suguru. “Why me?”
You’ve been asking yourself the same question for the past few weeks, torturing yourself with it.
The amethyst in his eyes shimmers. Ocean water drips down his skin and iridescent scales. His long black hair swirls around him like ink, spilling along his back, onto the deck. He’s one of the prettiest creatures you’ve ever seen.
You know his hands were made for destruction, and yet, he’s so gentle when he picks up your hand, holding it in his own. You can feel his claws scraping your skin. It tickles. He smiles at your laughter, small and secretive.
“One.” He tries his best to make you understand with his limited vocabulary. “One ours.”
You tilt your head. His mouth opens before it snaps shut again. His hands curl into fists, personifying the frustration he must feel. You understand it. Wanting a distraction, you glance around. The pearls scattered along the deck catch your eye.
Satoru had restarted his favorite pastime. Even after you accepted the shell, he still brought various items found from the depths. You keep the bigger ones: the pretty conch shells that you press against your ear, the glistening pearls, the vintage jewelry. It’s a little ironic that you probably have accumulated thousands of dollars right here on the deck, and yet, there is no true value to them at all.
You pluck one of the treasures up– a golden ring— examining it in your grasp.
“Why haven’t you given me anything yet?” You ask with a teasing lilt in your voice, showcasing your find to Suguru.
He observes it, then you. You allow him to take it from your fingers, carefully balancing the valuable in his palm.
“No choose.” He simply says. He hasn’t chosen anything yet. You don’t know how to feel about his confession.
“Home.” He suddenly tells you. You glance up at him.
“What?”
“Home.” He repeats, when he smiles, you can see the fangs hidden under plush lips. The unspoken danger. “Come see?”
“You want me to see your home?”
He nods. “Under…ocean. Come see?”
You send him a look. “I can’t breathe underwater.”
That’s not the only thing that stops you from jumping into the ocean. It’s them. Playing pretend up in the safety of the ship, where you can run away when things get too scary, is one thing. Willingly letting them pull you into the ocean is another. You’ve seen what they can do. You’ve seen how easily beings shaped like you can bow to beings shaped like them, even when you didn’t.
Suguru frowns. “Safe. Home close.” He insists.
There’s a splash from below. Satoru stares up at you with big eyes. Underneath the water, you can see his claws, still at his sides.
They were dangerous.
And yet, the smile on Satoru’s face when you give the tiniest nod melts something inside of you.
𓆝
The water is calm today. It gently licks your feet as you dangle your body over the boat. It’s not as cold as you thought it’d be. It doesn’t help the flipping of your stomach, however. You know you agreed to this, and yet, you feel like you’ve swallowed rocks, and they’re jostling around in your belly.
They’re already below you, lurking about in the water. Suguru’s closer, while Satoru stays a little further away. Their positions make sense in a way, you don’t trust Satoru to not get over-zealous. Suguru, in a way, is a little more careful.
Like he can sense your nervousness, Suguru is lifting one clawed arm up, barely touching your calf, not pulling, simply waiting. You take a minute, bringing yourself together, before you reach out to hold his hand.
And then, you jump.
You close your eyes just before the plunge. The sea engulfs you. You hear the water rush over your head. For a moment, there’s nothing, and then you break into the surface again.
When you open your eyes, Suguru smiles. You can see his fangs, ever so slightly pressed against plush lips. Another reminder that you’ve left your domain, and leapt into theirs.
Your heartbeat quickens when he leans forward. You don’t think it’s just out of fear anymore.
“Okay?” He’s asking, voice pushing and pulling like the waves you’re surrounded in.
You barely give a nod.
“Okay.” You confirm.
His smile gets a tad bit warmer, before scowling. Satoru ruins the moment, invading your space, pushing himself into your shoulder. His weight pushes you deeper into the water before Suguru shoves him off with a hiss.
You laugh when Satoru moves back, head tilted down like he’s a scolded puppy. In some ways, that’s exactly what he was. To comfort him, you reach over, brushing away the wet hair that clings to his forehead. He melts into your touch.
Suguru gives a whistle. When you turn back, he’s sinking lower into the water, showing his back.
‘Ready?’ He silently asks with his eyes.
As an answer, you reach forward, wrapping your arms around his neck, clinging onto his back. He gives a low rumble when you nestle your face into the crook of his neck.
He moves when you’re properly balanced. Much to your relief, he doesn’t dive immediately under the waves. He keeps both his and your heads above the surface, moving forward. Despite your added weight, it doesn’t seem to hamper his speed in the slightest. Somehow, you feel like he’s being slow for your sake.
Satoru circles you two. You follow him with your eyes as he goes round and around. When you peek down, you spot a school of fish swimming down below. Suguru passes them with ease. You’ve always had an affinity for the water, but not even you could travel as fast or as far as they currently are. They move so fast, the waves almost blur around you.
You figure out their destination a few miles in. There’s a large rock formation, jutting out from above the water. Suguru’s speed slows down.
Satoru moves in front of you. He takes a dramatic gulp of air, puffing up his cheeks. You have to smile at how cute he’s being, but you can read his message.
‘Hold your breath.’
You inhale, feeling the air fill your lungs.
And then, you’re descending.
Water and bubbles swirl around you as Suguru leads you deeper and deeper. Cracking your eyes open, you can see the blurry figure of Satoru, drifting deeper and deeper into the depths.
Out of instinct, you tighten your hold onto Suguru, hoping you aren’t choking him. He doesn’t seem to mind one way or another. You can feel one of his clawed hands find their way to your forearm, holding you in place. It’s an act of comfort, but you don’t feel it the way he intends.
You can hold your breath for a while, but you can already feel your lungs about to burst. The need for air is starting to burn, a demand that’s screaming from your lungs and heart and cells.
Just before you think you’re about to pass out, you surface.
You collapse against wet rock, greedily taking in the air. It still smells like salt and sea. Maybe a little fresher. You must be inside the rock formation, you slowly realize. It was some type of underwater cave.
Not completely underwater, however. There’s a ray of light coming from above. When you look up, there’s a hole right on the ceiling that might have been 30 or so feet above your head.
Along the shore, there’s algae that curbs against the sharp rocks. It wasn’t natural, they had been placed there.
You sit against the wet rock, letting the sun warm your skin. In front of you, the two creatures linger. Always watching.
“Like?” Satoru prods after a while.
You nod. Yeah, you do. It was nice compared to the boat, the stiff metal and wood. Here, you can feel the waves against your feet, the sun filtering through the ceiling. It’s like a mini beach.
“It’s pretty,” you say, “thank you.”
Suguru swims forward at your compliment, extremely pleased. You can practically see him preening, and you huff out a laugh. After a while, they resemble nothing more than peacocks. You close your eyes, leaning back on your hands. Despite being thoroughly soaked, you feel warm.
You can hear them shifting closer and closer. When you open your eyes, Satoru’s in front of you.
Glittering jewel eyes. The brightest blue, almost like you’re staring up at a cloudless sky. The fins on either side of his face were flattened. A bead of water trails down his neck. You watch as it travels along flawless skin.
“Pretty.” Satoru echoes.
You nod, looking down at the crystal-clear water lingering right by your knees. “It’s all really pretty.” Your eyes flick up, looking at his iridescent scales and fins.
“You’re pretty too.” You tell him.
Satoru’s always been the more adventurous out of the two. He pushed forward with no fear. He’s a conqueror, trekking to places you would never dare go to. You know him well enough now to know that he’s impulsive and unpredictable.
Even knowing all that, you couldn’t have ever imagined how warm his lips were.
Despite his strength, his claws, his monstrousness, Satoru is so gentle. His kiss is featherlight, barely touching, as though he’s afraid you’d break if he got any closer. Maybe he’s right to be worried, because you find yourself melting, despite the thudding of your heartbeat. You can hear it loud within your chest, and you wonder if he can hear it too.
He pulls away, and you lean back against the warm rock, regaining your ability to breathe.
“Pretty.” He tells you, eyes glittering with honesty. “Pretty pretty.”
“I…” Your voice feels so far away. “I don’t understand.”
But you do. You always have. You think you just need to hear it.
“Choose you.” Satoru starts, words foreign on his inhuman tongue. “See you. Give gifts. Sing song…choose you.”
You think back to those pearls and shells scattered across the deck, shimmering with whites and soft, blushy pinks. You can still hear the song they sing those nights underneath the gibbous Moon, the way their voices echoed far into the stars, rippled across the ocean, carried by the salt-singed wind.
“Want you.” Satoru continues, eyes glistening with a celestial beauty you could barely even fathom. “Want you as…”
Mate. The word comes suddenly into your brain. It came from some part of you that was hidden away for years and years, shriveled away by the land and the dry shore.
Your eyes tilt over to Suguru. He has yet to speak, and he still won’t. Instead, he’s reaching over, gently pulling you back into the water. You follow, feeling the water ripple around you.
You’re handed over to Satoru. He takes you with a purr, pulling you alongside him. His movements are so graceful, it soothes the racing of your heartbeat. You feel the rhythm that hums through the water. It takes you a moment to recognize his movements. You saw it a couple of times before, back when they were nothing more than beasts, back when you thought they were nothing like you.
It’s that dance. The one you saw Satoru and Suguru do all those times before.
Satoru weaves you around the water, and you, helpless, entranced, bewitched, trail after every dip and turn he does. It feels like hours, but it might have only been a few minutes. Time stops, and seconds are stagnant.
You can feel Suguru’s presence looming behind you. You feel whispers of his breath flickering over your wet skin. There’s a ghost of hands barely touching your being.
He stops when the water feels like air against your skin, right at the center of the cavern. Below the surface, your feet kick at the water, instinctively trying to reach the sand. Satoru’s arms are secured at your sides, like you’d dissolve into the sea if he dared to loosen his grip. His scales shimmer against the sunbeams. You can’t look away from his brilliant, crystal blue eyes.
“Want you,” Satoru repeats.
Something breaks deep inside of you. A feeling that’s foreign to you starts to bloom.
“Why?”
You’ve asked Suguru this question once, once, when you were high above the ocean and feeling the salty sea blow against your skin. He couldn’t give you a proper answer, not one you could be satisfied with. Why was it you they kept circling around? Why was it you who received such precious gifts? Why you?
Suguru is right behind you, and he leans into your weight. You can hear him sigh into your skin.
Satoru smiles. You can see those fangs again. Lifetimes ago, they would have terrified you, but in this warm cave, underneath the shining light of the sun–
“One of us.” His confession is raw and true. “Ours.”
It’s been a while since you’ve felt like this before. The feeling of belonging. You couldn’t find an inkling of it, not when thousands and millions of your kind surrounded you.
But in this cave, just the two of them are enough to make you finally feel human again.
You don’t know who moves first, but it doesn’t matter. Satoru’s lips are plush and soft; you can taste flickers of ocean waves. He tastes like heaven, something about his presence makes your mind drift up into the clouds, aimless, like a velella dipped in royal blue drifting along the waves.
“One of us.” Suguru echoes, and his voice clicks something into place deep inside of you. When you break away from Satoru’s urging lips, you feel like you can breathe for the first time in decades, like the air isn’t choking you dry anymore. You can feel it then, a tiny piece of Satoru was nestling inside you, keeping you afloat. Something he gave to you, and you accepted.
‘One of us.’ Both of their voices bubble and simmer into your soul.
You don’t realize you’re back on the shore until you feel the rocks underneath your thighs. They’re smooth, and you soon discover they’re lined with soft moss. It was handmade with comfort kept in mind.
You can’t linger on it. Not when you can feel Suguru’s lips on your collarbone, tracing your skin with his razor-sharp teeth. You’re still underneath him, growing limp against his soft hold. You melt at the way they handle you. Always so gentle. They touch you like you’re made of fragile seashells, inches away from breaking. The tiny piece Satoru gave you blooms at their touch.
You let yourself fall in the trance they put you in, your body goes limp in their hold as claws rake over your flimsy clothes, eager to take them off. You gasp when Suguru grasps onto your waist, squeezing. Your back arches, giving Satoru the perfect opportunity to nestle his face into your neck, breathing in your scent.
You freeze when he goes lower, and then lower.
You glance down at him. Pretty blue eyes stare up. He looks almost innocent like this, nestling his face into your cleavage, as though he were oblivious to his own actions. It makes you want to laugh.
You suck on your bottom lip. His gaze follows it—something hot coils in your belly.
‘One of them.’ They promised you.
You slowly peel off your wet shirt. Satoru watches each movement keenly. Suguru is silent behind you. You feel like you’re being hunted, even though you’ve already been caught and it’s too late for an escape.
They’ve always been fascinated by your clothes. Your damp bra is just as captivating. Satoru runs his fingers through the cloth, his claws catching on the patterned threads. You wonder if he can hear your heartbeat thudding in your chest. Blood is pumping through your ears.
Satoru pulls down your bra ever so slightly, fingers graze over your nipple. You shiver under his touch.
“Pretty.” He tells you. “Pretty pretty.”
You feel your face grow hot, and you break eye contact. Like a predator, Satoru leaps onto you, meshing his lips with yours once again. He kneads at your tits, squeezing hard enough that he draws whines and simpers from your mouth. He drinks them all, enjoying his feast.
You don’t realize Suguru’s moved until he’s touching your feet, feeling up the skin of your calves. By this time, you’re barely clothed, just as naked as those two are. The only thing that keeps your dignity intact is your thin shorts. For now.
Suguru’s hands are cool against your thighs, just like the rest of him. It’s only when you’re guiding him along with your shorts, slipping them down your legs, that you remember how different he is to you. He seems to share the feeling because he delicately takes one of your legs, wrapping his fingers around your heel. Suguru watches in quiet fascination as your leg extends and bends until he’s able to wrap it around his shoulder. Your heel hooks behind his back.
You’re wet. Not just from your trip, but from the way Satoru touched you and kissed you–from the way Suguru keeps staring. You two are so different. For a moment, you wonder if women of his species even look the way you do. You wonder if he’s stopping because you look odd to him–if he’s changing his mind.
You’re pulling back, close to pushing him away, but Suguru is having none of it. He attaches to your pussy with his mouth and begins to consume.
It’s already too much. His tongue is long and dextrous, and he’s already digging his way through your gummy walls, eager to suck you dry. You throw your head back, leaning against Satoru for support as Suguru continues to eat you out. Satoru grasps your waist, squeezing the skin. He chirps something foreign to Suguru, the latter sends him a smug glance. It was something obnoxious about you but you can’t care less when Suguru manages to find your clit with a curious lick.
You can’t hide your reactions. You writhe and shudder underneath his touch. You’re grasping onto Suguru’s hair, knotting it into your fists. He barely seems to mind, leaning into your touch with a mouth-watering purr.
You come with an unfiltered scream as your orgasm pulses through you. You’re arching into Satoru, feeling the pleasure roll over your stomach and tits. Suguru isn’t stopping, not at just one. The moment you come down from your high, slipping down to Earth, he’s grabbing your thighs, pulling you back to him, pushing deeper.
He only let’s go when your screams die down to mewls. You watch in exhaustion as rises from his spot between your legs. Satoru catches him mid-way, clashing his lips and teeth with Suguru.
He’s tasting you through his mate, the thought makes your pussy wet all over again. Satoru loves it, he grins down at you with a shiny mouth. He doesn’t say anything, but you can hear his thoughts.
“Shut up.” You tell him. He coos.
They’re switching positions again. You watch, propped up on the mossy floor as Satoru lines himself up between your legs. He licks his lips and you spot his sharp white fangs. Your hole clenches on nothing as he shifts further towards you.
You spot it then, right below his abdomen.
It almost looks alive as it slowly emerges from the slit. It’s long and thick–far thicker than Suguru’s tongue–a flushed pink and completely inhuman. It doesn’t feel human either–far cooler than your heated skin.
You’re too far gone. You need it. You need it as deep it can go inside of you.
Satoru doesn’t need much prompting, fisting his dick in one hand he buries it inside of you, inch by inch.
It’s excruciatingly good. You writhe and wiggle against him, and when Satoru stills you with a firm grasp on your wrist, you fall against Suguru’s shoulder, panting and moaning.
“Easy.” You tell him, breathless, when Satoru gets too excited. “Go easy.”
Satoru only heeds your warning when Suguru punctuates it with a warning hiss. He’s a lot slower after that.
You can tell it’s torture to be gentle, yet he tries anyway. His eyes have narrowed, and he’s tensing his jaw in concentration. You can feel his cock bury itself further inside of you. You’re wet enough to take it all in one motion, but he’s careful of you and your body. You love it when they do that–treat you like you’re made from gentle glass, even when they aren’t used to holding back.
Eventually, Satoru bottoms out as his hips meet yours. You and him gasp for air. He rests his head against your shoulder, kissing your sweaty skin. It takes a moment to get used to his cock. It’s so much cooler than the rest of you. You can’t imagine what your pussy must feel like to him. You must be burning, like a furnace. It must hurt.
But, Satoru always struck you as a masochist.
“Good, good pretty.” Satoru tells you with a breathless voice, trying to convey his feelings as well as he can with his stilted voice. You nod along, understanding in some strange way.
He takes a moment like that, just staying.
And then, he starts to move.
Slowly, at first. He rocks his hips back and forth, as though he’s practicing the movements. It’s almost embarrassing how needy your body is–your pussy trying to suck his dick right back inside. Then, he’s going faster. Then faster.
And then he’s practically humping you like a dog than a fish.
You relish in it, rocking against his movements, wrapping your legs around his waist, keeping him from going too far. Out of sheer desperation, you dig your nails into his back, sure you’re drawing blood. Satoru takes it in stride, fucking into you even faster.
Suguru, never one to be left out, explores your skin. He licks down your collarbone and chest until he reaches your tits. It’s almost instinct when he sucks on your nipple, swirling his tongue around your areola.
You can’t hold off. It’s all so much. And it turns so much worse when Suguru reaches over between you and Satoru to rub your clit.
Your orgasm is inevitable and yet it still takes you by surprise. It fizzes over your body, forcing you to arch your back as you spasm on his cock. Satoru follows the same fate moments later when he gives a garbled moan and something warm fills your battered pussy.
You three lay like that, catching your breaths, not at all eager to move. Eventually, you regain your ability to think again. Satoru’s dick slips from your pussy, leaving behind his cum mixed in with yours.
Lips meet your collarbone. Another is at the base of your neck. Slowly, they work their way up and down your body, relishing you with gentle and much-needed affection. You allow them, melting into their touches as they kiss away whatever bruises and scratches they left on you.
Claws lightly graze your cheek.
“Ok?” Suguru asks, quiet and soft.
“Ok.” You whisper back.
You smile, and when he returns it, you feel full again. But when you lean in to kiss him, Suguru pulls away.
Your smile disappears. His own is softer, this time. He leans forward, careful to miss your lips, placing a chaste kiss on your cheek. His damp forehead meets your own.
“No choose.” He tells you again, just like that moment from when you were both up on the ship, but this time you understand.
They chose you, but you hadn’t chosen them, yet.
You were still lingering by the shore–refusing to jump in. You enjoyed the waves push and pull themselves towards you, gently kissing your toes, but you did not follow.
You couldn’t give the sand up. You were still human. Satoru could accept that, which is why that piece of him still rests inside you. Suguru couldn’t.
You can have Satoru because Satoru is okay with just having pieces of you. He’d gladly keep any crumb you left behind for him before you once again disappear into a world he cannot reach.
But Suguru couldn’t bear to touch you if he couldn’t have every part of you as his own. He’d much rather have your memory flicker away into water than share you with the land.
Despite the name you gave Satoru, you understand Suguru more. You don’t think you could bear that either. You could have one or the other, but they can’t have you.
Your silence makes them wane. Satoru coos, pushing for a reaction. You can feel Suguru at your shoulder. Always watching.
“Take me back.”
Satoru’s face falls. You can’t look at either of them.
“Please take me back.”
You can feel them looking at each other. It makes you feel worse.
Suguru nuzzles his face into the crook of your neck.
“Okay.” He acquiesces.
You asked and they agreed, and yet, they gave you a few more seconds to stay, lingering in the waters of paradise.
𓆝
You asked for a bit more time.
Suguru agreed. Satoru just stared, and you were starting to wonder if it was truly possible to have it all.
They’re still around. You see remnants of their fins disappearing into the water. At night, you can hear the distant melancholy of their song. You don’t sleep outside these nights. It’s colder now.
There’s a clock somewhere slowly ticking to zero. Time is running out. You don’t know how you can tell. Maybe it’s another thing Satoru left with you.
You don’t know a single thing you have left on the shore. You don’t have friends, and you’re being delusional if you think you can make any. You don’t have family, you don’t have ambitions, or any goals. You just go through life because it’s the only think you’ve ever known.
Satoru and Suguru are electric. They fill you with something you’ve never experienced before. You finally feel part of something.
But they’ve killed people. Humans, like you.
You look at your hands. They look normal, but something is brimming just beneath your fingertips.
Were you ever human?
You don’t know. You don’t know anything about anything anymore, and it’s killing you.
You wished she were here.
The boat rocks, jolting you out of your thoughts. You peek out the window. The sun was long gone, and the moon was rising. You wait to hear their song, seeping into the night, calling for you.
Minutes pass. Hours.
There’s nothing. There’s just you drifting along the current.
𓆝
It’d been a while since you’ve dreamed of the lakehouse and the pond.
Everything is just as you remembered. Sunlight reflected over the surface, glittering like diamonds and stars. Deep-green lilies bobbed up and down. Dragonflies flitted back and forth along the shore. The sun warmed your skin.
She was there too, but there’s something different about her. The lines around her eyes and mouth were softer. Her skin looked smoother. Her eyes were bright with young mischief. Instead of being in that wheelchair you used to despise so much, she stares at you from the water.
“Fish?” She tilts her head.
“You’re so beautiful.” That's all you can say.
She laughs, high-pitched and girlish. You love hearing it. She’s so different, but you know it’s her. It can’t be anyone else.
“Did you like my gifts?” She prods, retreating from the water to sit on the banks.
Your heart flutters. “Were you the one who sent those two?”
She doesn’t answer. You don’t need her to. You draw closer, reaching out to touch her cheek. She’s several degrees cooler than you; your hand must feel like a furnace to her, yet she melts into your touch, letting you feel her cheek, nose, and forehead.
“Are you home?” You ask.
She nods.
“Did you miss me?” She asks.
Your eyes sting. “More than anything.”
She’s still smiling–still so beautiful. Even as the glamour starts to fade, when skin turns into scales, blunt teeth turn into fangs, you never once stopped thinking about her beauty.
“Are you coming home, then?”
You pull back slightly.
“I can’t.” You tell her. “I’m still human.”
She laughs. “Are you?”
You stay silent. She grabs your arm, mindful of her claws, careful not to pierce your skin.
“I understand, Fish.” She tells you kindly. “It’s hard to be sure of anything.” She places something into your palm.
“But it’s even harder to be alone.”
You stare at the pearls: blue and purple.
“I don’t want to be alone anymore.”
She tilts her head and smiles until she shows teeth, before she sinks further and further into the pond.
The last thing you see of her is her iridescent scales disappearing into the depths.
𓆝
The sky is a violent swirl of grays and blues. Thunder dangerously rumbles over the horizon. The ocean was growing tired of waiting.
You step onto the deck. The smell of rain is heavy in the air. Angry clouds obscure the sun.
Despite your decision being made hours ago, you can still feel the anxiety building up in your heart. You’re still scared.
And yet, today, the fear of the unknown is nothing compared to the fear of going back to obscurity.
Neither of the creatures appears. Even the tiny piece Satoru left within you remained silent today. And yet, your heart flutters when you spot something on the deck. A tiny seashell.
It’s not from Satoru. You cement your decision when you curl it into your fist in acceptance.
You take one last breath of air, and then you jump.
You hit the ice-cold water. You squeeze your eyes shut as you sink deeper into the depths.
Deeper.
Deeper.
Fingers touch the back of your calves.
Deeper.
Deeper.
Hands on your waist.
Deeper.
Deeper.
Lips on your mouth.
Something locks in place deep inside of you–
And then you breathe.
𓆝
After weeks of searching, they finally find it.
It was the strangest thing. Every day, the coast guard searched and searched the waters for a lost yacht filled with young adults. They used sonar and top-of-the-line machinery. At one point, even a plane was used, soaring overhead to see if they could spot the vessel from the skies.
Nothing for weeks.
And one day, out of nowhere, a ‘ghost ship’ was reported.
When the retrieval team got on deck, there was nothing. They found no struggle, no panic, no bodies. It’s as if everyone vanished into thin air.
Someone stayed behind longer than the others.
They can see evidence of it all around. Half-eaten chips and cans of unopened food littered the area. A used harpoon was left abandoned. The calendar on the captain’s deck was crossed out with the same marker. 17 days. This survivor had stayed behind for nearly two weeks.
summary. after years of failed dating app matches, you finally hit it off with someone. he’s funny, charming, emotionally available… and apparently?! not who you thought he was... literally — because he used his ex-best friend suguru geto as his profile picture! so now, you’re stranded in a foreign country for the holidays, stuck with the real satoru gojo: a digimon-loving, trivia-winning, six-foot-tall nerd who... sure. may have catfished you. but he also might just win your heart.
tags/warnings. fluffy holiday au. nerdjo. light angst. slow burn. eventual smut. long distance relationship (reader is from cali, satoru is from japan). fake dating. one bed trope (yuuuup). found family feelings w/ the jjk cast. lots of dorky humor. alcohol/weed usage. there’s a bit of suguru x reader (also sukuna hits on you a lot bc he wants to piss gojo off). endgame is satoru x reader w/ a happy ending! soft and silly romcom vibes.
author note. merry christmas! this fic is loosely based on the movie Love Hard (w/ my own retelling). it'll be 2 parts! i wanted it to be a oneshot and was rly hoping to finish it before christmas but life got in my way so alas. i'll say more towards the bottom but enjoy this first part for now~ (art by @/leimiruu on x)
main masterlist - part 2 >>>
Love is… hard.
Not ‘hard’ like an honest misunderstanding, or a fight you work through with emotional maturity and a seasonally appropriate Hallmark movie kiss.
No — ‘hard’ like dodging your fifth unsolicited dick pic of the week while Googling ‘how to spot a narcissist,’ because apparently you need a manual now. Like realizing your therapist makes more money off your dating trauma than you ever will.
Which is funny, considering people pay you to write about it.
“Do I believe in love? No. But I do believe in ad revenue. And trust me — what you’re writing? Sells. You’ll make it big, darling. I swear.”
Wise words from your boss, Mei-Mei. And by wise, you mean cold, calculated, and unfortunately? Very on brand.
You’re a columnist for Swipe Right into Hell, and your beat? Disaster dates. Ghostings. Red flags. You write about it all. One guy asked if he could wear his ex-wife’s wedding ring during sex. Another told you he didn’t believe in astrology or feminism — but he did believe in Bitcoin.
So, yeah. If love is a battlefield, you’re the war correspondent. Bulletproof. Jaded. Always packing a pen.
You’d think by now — after all the swipes, the situationships, the nights replaying bad decisions in bathroom mirrors — you’d have cracked the code. Found the formula. Unlocked the algorithm to real connection.
Mei-Mei certainly thinks you did.
“Ughhh. You’re a genius! I swear, your last column was chef’s kiss,” she purred to you on Monday, tapping her lacquered nails against a chart of engagement analytics. “Tragically humiliating… in a relatable way, of course!”
Tragically humiliating?
Yeah, sure. That’s one way to describe it. Your date dumped you via a Venmo memo when you asked him to split the bill with you.
(“Lunch was great. You’re not. ✌️”)
“Uh... thanks. I think?”
You weren’t entirely sure if that was praise or exploitation — because with Mei-Mei, the line was always blurred.
“Of course, baby!” she cooed. “Your ratings are exceptionally high. But... let’s kick it up a notch, shall we?” And grinning like a cheshire cat, she slid a detailed spreadsheet in front of you encouragingly.
“We need a story so massive before Christmas. Don’t ask me why, but holiday trauma performs extremely well. I expect your report by early-December. Get back out there, hm?”
Apparently, love is dead. Because people live for drama. For tragedy. It’s unfortunate, but it gets the clicks. And despite all the ‘new material’ you’re looking for? A part of you still aches — still yearns — for love.
So, like a well-trained masochist, you swipe. Again.
| Brett, 27 — Los Angeles, CA |
“Hey, kitten. I’m Sapiosexual. An INTJ. Love your profile. Let’s chat, yeah?”
Sent a dick pic and texted “U up?” at 3:17 a.m. on a Tuesday. (You weren’t)
Swipe.
| Colin, 32 — Santa Monica, CA |
“Sup. I’m just a nice guy. Totally not like other guys.”
Sent a three-paragraph spiral about how nice guys finish last due to unrequited love. (With his childhood best friend.)
Swipe.
| Naoya, 22 — Orange County, CA |
“What do you do for fun? Because let me set the record straight. I love a woman who knows their place. Preferably, three steps behind me. Or in the kitchen.”
You reported him. Twice. (Just to be sure…)
Swipe.
| Greg, 25 — San Francisco, CA |
“Hey. Uh... I’m married btw. But it’s complicated, u know?”
You almost admire the honesty. (Almost.)
Swipe.
Swipe.
Swipe.
You were about five more red flags away from joining a monastery when suddenly, you got an idea. Perhaps... it’s just California? You’ve been living here your whole damn life. Let’s try escaping the endless sea of self-proclaimed “entrepreneurs” — the gym bros, the surfer stoners. The men who think that being emotionally available is a liability.
So? You expand your distance radius.
Like...
Way out.
Just to see what would happen.
| Satoru, 26 — Kyoto, Japan |
“Hey. I’m not here to play games. Unless it’s Mario Kart. But don’t cry, because I’d totally win, sweetheart.”
It’s a miracle. Because for once, there’s no shirtless mirror selfie. It’s just a guy on a front porch, wearing a hoodie. There’s a coffee cupped in his hands, with long raven hair falling against the violet hue of his eyes.
He has gauges, a sleepy smile, and oh my god he’s—
…gorgeous.
And not the curated, flex-for-attention kind of gorgeous you’ve learned to dodge. No. There’s something… approachable about him. Soft. Stupidly warm. Like if you sat beside him, he wouldn’t talk — he’d listen.
~ ♡ ︎ You’ve matched with Satoru Gojo! ♡ ︎ ~
...typing
Satoru: Did you know that the universe is 13.8 billion years old? There are billions of galaxies. Trillions of stars. And yet… here we are. Matched on a dating app.
Satoru: So… hi!
Satoru: Wanna test fate?
You: lol 😂
You: well then...
You: that’s one way to say hello!! 😝
Satoru: Yeah... figured I’d lead with existential dread instead of wyd 😉
He was... normal.
Stupidly normal. Maybe a bit nerdy.
But somehow? It worked. He made you smile.
...typing
Satoru: Okayokayokay... but REAL question...
Satoru: Do you pour milk before cereal??? 🤨 Or are you a functioning member of society?
You: 😨😨
You: excuse you!!
You: what kind of monster do you think i am??? 😒
Satoru: Phew 😩
Satoru: Just needed to be sure!! People have surprised me before
And just like that, you were hooked.
You talked while brushing your teeth. On your lunch break. In bed, half-asleep, phone screen dimmed but still open to his thread. He’s got opinions on everything.
Anime, horror movies, why candy canes are overrated, the superiority of old-school consoles, and the tragic fall of Yahoo Answers.
One day he asked:
...typing
Satoru: Are you more of a salty girl or a sweet girl?
You paused, halfway through folding laundry, holding one sock while you reach for your phone.
...typing
You: hmmm.....
You: are we talking snacks?? or personality type?
Satoru: 👀
Satoru: Well shit...
Satoru: Now I wanna know the answer to both...
You: hehehe 😇
You: what do YOU think i am?
Satoru: Oh, hell no...
Satoru: I’m not falling for that
Satoru: Bc if I guess wrong, you’ll never let me hear the end of it.
You: pshhh...
You: that response answers for me 😛
You: but hmm... i guess i’m both?
You: bc it depends on the day... OR the person.
Satoru: Okay cool
Satoru: Soooo... I’m either incredibly lucky, or you’re about to ruin my life in a really interesting way.
You: ruin you??
You: never!!
You: ...you're one of the few people i actually wanna be sweet to ❤️
Satoru: ❤️
Satoru: Guess it's a good thing that I'm a sweet guy 😉 both snack AND personality wise
Satoru: Which brings me back to the important question...
Satoru: Snacks
Satoru: Salty or sweet. Answer wisely, sweetheart.
You: hmm...
Satoru: This data could make or break us 🤨
You: imma salty kinda girl
Satoru: ...
You: but i don’t dislike sweet things! 😘
Satoru: Siiiiiigh...
Satoru: Fine. I respect it
Satoru: Even though it’s OBJECTIVELY the wrong answer 🙄 guess I’ll just have to be the sweet one in this relationship
Somehow, it never felt forced. You didn’t have to explain your jokes. You didn’t have to shrink yourself or play dumb or brace for silence. He got it. He got you. And he made you laugh — constantly. But more than that… he made you feel safe.
It was easy to forget you’d never seen him move. Never heard his laugh in real life.
Until you started calling each other.
What started as a five-minute “just wanted to hear your voice” spiraled into two hours. Then three. Now it’s just… what you do. The sound of his voice has become background music — familiar and warm, the kind of thing you could fall asleep to. Soft, a little raspy, warm around the edges when he laughs.
He talks fast when he gets excited — usually about Digimon lore, bad anime dubs, or some absurd theory he read online at 3 a.m. He jumps from tangent to tangent like he’s chasing thoughts through constellations — but somehow, never leaves you behind.
And when he’s really into something, you can hear it. His voice lifts like gravity can’t hold it.
“Hmm… if we were two particles traveling at the speed of light,” he murmured, “do you think we’d still find each other in another timeline?”
“Oh my god…” you smiled against your pillow; voice thick with sleep. “Is this your version of ‘Would you still love me if I was a worm’ Satoru?”
His laugh was soft and breathy, wrapping around your ribs like ribbon.
“Pshh… no,” he scoffed, and you could hear the pout in his voice as he shuffled against his own bedsheets. Then, with a huff he drawled. “This is my scientifically superior version of that question.”
“Mmm… I see,” your hum was sleepy, curling deeper under the blanket. Grinning, your eyes fluttered closed as you murmured. “Yes. I think we would”
A comfortable silence settled, and you could hear the line crackle softly as he exhaled.
“I wish…” he said after a beat, “…we could spend Christmas together. It’s not fair you’re so far away.”
His voice was quiet, like he was afraid to say it too loud. And somehow, it landed harder than any confession. You pressed your ear closer to the phone, like maybe, if you try hard enough, you’ll feel the weight of him on the mattress beside you.
“Yeah…” you whispered. “Me too.”
You’d been talking to Satoru for a month now — and honestly, every other man you come across can’t hold a candle to him. So, when Mei Mei saunters to your desk December 1st, silk blouse pristine and judgment already locked and loaded, you know she’s not going to like what she finds.
“It’s officially December, my dear,” she hums, lowering herself into the chair across from you, tilting her head in that familiar, patronizing way. “So. Where are my lines?”
Your fingers still over the keyboard. Time to come clean.
“I know, I know…” you say, rubbing at your temples before finally looking up. Your heart thumps harder than it should. “And… don’t be mad. But… just hear me out. What if this year… I don’t write about heartbreak?”
It’s like you might as well have told her you quit. The silence is deafening while she blinks at you, deadpan — like you’ve grown a second head.
“Darling,” she says coolly, with a bitter laugh. “Christmas is in three weeks. I don’t need pleasantries — I need pain.”
“But that’s just it, isn’t it?” you push gently, sitting a little straighter in your chair. “Christmas is supposed to feel… good. Warm. Like something you lean into, not brace yourself against.” You gesture vaguely toward the window, the gray sky.
You’ve always been alone for the holidays. No family. No one asking when you’ll be home.
“I mean… people are… tired. Stressed. Lonely. The world already feels cold enough without another reminder that love is awful. Right?”
Mei scoffs, flipping her hair over one shoulder, repulsed by the suggestion. “That mushy shit doesn’t sell…” And her eyes sharpen, flicking back to you. “You sound dangerously sentimental. Very unlike you, darling.”
Your mouth opens. Closes.
Little does she know… this is you. Or at least, the you that’s been kept hidden your entire career — doing something that feels so… empty. You’re tired. Tired of pretending that love is dead. For once, you want to believe in it. Believe that all this with Satoru — the potential for love — could be real.
“…I met someone.”
That gives her pause.
“Oh?”
Her snobbish tone is hard to ignore, but you don’t let it diminish the excitement you feel from the thought of him.
Satoru.
“Yeah… he’s—” you begin with a breathless laugh, tucking your chin into your palm like it might hide your grin. “Ugh. He’s good, Mei. Like… really fucking good. Funny… smart… thoughtful…”
But Mei’s sculpted brow arches as you continue to gush.
“Ohmygod and so handsome too,” you breathe, face lighting up. “Like. It’s unfair how good-looking he is, I swear. Plus, he remembers the little things I say, and he always checks in when I’ve had a rough day. It’s like…” you pause, breath catching as your heart aches with longing.
“It’s like… he sees me, Mei.”
At that, a knowing hum rumbles through your boss.
“I see…” she nods, lips tugging upward. “Well. Can you show me a picture, then?”
“Oh, sure!” you chirp, already digging for your phone in your bag. Your heart flutters at the sight of his photo, and after navigating to his profile, you hand the device over to her.
Her eyes narrow, then flick back to you. “This guy is in Japan…” and you can already hear it, that condescending tone, syrupy sweet. “I wonder… have you seen him yet?”
“W-What?” you blink, crossing your arms, instantly on guard. “Well… no. But it’s a sixteen-hour time difference! It’s hard to line up video calls, but we talk all the time and—”
“Mm.” That’s all she needs. She’s handing the phone back with a noise you’d describe as infuriatingly smug. “No way he’s that perfect,” she says, already rising to her feet. “I bet he’s catfishing you.”
Your heart drops.
God. That’d be just your luck.
“What?! N-No!” you argue, unwilling to entertain the idea. “It’s real, Mei. He’s real.”
“Mmm. So is Santa Claus~”
You scoff, brows furrowing.
“No, seriously. He said he wanted to spend Christmas with me. I was actually thinking of surprising him — flying out and —”
“Oh, that sounds wonderful,” she interrupts, saccharine and sharp. “Flying to Japan? To meet a man you’ve never met?” a loud pompous laugh bursts out of her lips, making your blood boil. “Ahhh… what a story! I expect lines, my dear~”
And as her heels are clicking away, you glare after her, cheeks hot, heart thudding with equal parts embarrassment and fury.
That… bitch.
Fine. You’re going to prove her wrong.
You must.
It hadn’t taken much convincing to get Satoru’s address.
You told him you wanted to send a Christmas present. He teased you, of course.
“A present? For little old me?” he drawled. “Awh… what is it? Is it scandalous? Oh!! Is it Digimon related??” You could practically hear the grin in his voice. And sure enough, a minute later, he sent his address with a laughing “Fine. But only if it’s Digimon-related, sweetheart.”
Little does he know…
It’s you you’re sending.
(Though yes, he’s still getting something Digimon-related too. You spent two weeks hand-knitting a Gabumon scarf hat — complete with floppy ears, tiny claws, and a ridiculous little horn. It’s absolutely absurd. You hope he’ll love it.)
Kyoto is blanketed in snow when you land — your breath visible in the air as you drag your suitcase outside the airport, gloved fingers fumbling with your phone. You manage to request a car (thank god for global apps), but the second the driver steps out and starts speaking rapid-fire Japanese, your brain goes static.
“Uh…. sumimasen?”
It’s the only word you know that seems remotely polite. That, and arigatou. Oh, and you know, baka, (thanks to Satoru’s anime rants about how “sub is superior to dub.” He swears by it, so naturally, you’ve started watching anime. In sub. Maybe because it feels like holding onto a piece of him.)
As you enter the car, you press your face to the frosty window and Kyoto whirls past — ancient shrines nestled between sleek buildings, power lines framed by snow-laced branches, vending machines glowing like beacons in the dark. The city is beautiful. Foreign. Dreamlike.
But then, the car pulls up to his house — and suddenly, you’re the one who feels foreign.
Because what the hell.
The place is huge.
It’s walled off with an iron gate, and a winding stone path leading up to a home that looks like a cross between a modern compound and a high-end ryokan. He’d told you his family was well off, but you didn’t realize well off meant a fucking dynasty.
Great. Now you’re standing here with your thrifted suitcase, the handmade gift for him, wrapped in a flimsy bag, wearing your own knitted scarf and a coat you borrowed from your roommate because your own has a busted zipper. You’re suddenly hyper-aware of every chipped nail, every dollar you don’t have in your bank account.
God. What are you even doing here? This man seems ever more too good to be true. What if he’s playing you? What if… Mei’s right. Does he even want you? What’ll he do when he sees you? What’ll he say?
Fuck.
You take a deep breath, tugging your scarf a little higher, gripping his present like a lifeline. It’s fine. Whatever. You came all this way. No turning back now, right?
When you ring the doorbell, a faint chime echoes inside the estate. The air bites at your cheeks while voices murmur on the other side. Footsteps near the entrance and then—
Click!
The shoji slides open. You’re grinning nervously — heart hammering in your chest, steadying yourself as a figure comes into sight. A figure whom is—
A woman.
“えっ…誰?何かご用ですか?”
She stands with one hand on the frame, backlit by the warm glow of the house behind her. Dark hair pulled into a lazy bun, a cigarette balanced between two fingers, smoke curling lazily into the night air. She’s tall. Cool. Effortlessly poised in a way you’ve never been. And she looks… young. Maybe your age.
Mei’s laugh is echoing in your goddamn ears.
Double fuck…
Did Satoru lie? Is this his girlfriend? His wife? A casual fling he forgot to mention? God. Is this why he never video chatted you?
It feels like a kick to the chest.
What the hell were you thinking?? Flying across the world for a guy you’ve never met in person?!
“ちょっと、聞こえてる?”
She’s still looking at you, head tilted slightly, eyes narrowed with vague curiosity — and you realize with a jolt you haven’t said anything. Not a word.
“Oh! I—uh—sumimasen?” you stammer, fumbling with the little Japanese you know. “S-Sorry, I… I don’t speak Japanese,” you laugh, awkward and breathless. “I think I have the wrong house, though. I was looking for someone named Satoru but—” with a glance past her, you try not to look desperate.
God. You’re such an idiot.
“Uhhh… never mind,” and clutching your suitcase, you attempt to retreat. “I’m so sorry. This was a mistake.”
Though her hand shoots out, catching your sleeve.
“Oh. Satoru? That idiot?” she says casually, in English this time — voice smooth, tinged with amusement. She flicks ash off the edge of the porch. “Yeah, you’re at the right house. He’s just at the FamilyMart with Yuji right now. Craving strawberry shortcake, apparently.”
As your brain begins to short-circuit, she takes one last drag of her cigarette, then steps aside, gesturing toward the entryway.
“C’mon. You’ll freeze your ass off.”
“Oiii,” Shoko calls. “We have a guest, guys! Say hello to—oh, um… sorry, what’s your name again?”
Before you know it, you’re stepping inside – toeing off your shoes at the entrance. Your feet pad against the tatami as you round the corner, and you’re greeted with a group of three other men sitting casually around a low table, with an abundance of snacks at the center.
Though, despite how laid-back the room appears, with pillows and drinks and half opened bags – there’s an underlying tension so thick, you swear it could cut glass.
They’re all staring at you with stone faces.
One man is blonde, with a chiseled jawline and a stern demeaner. Another has bubblegum-pink hair and tattoos crawling up both arms, and the third is a teenager with messy black hair who looks like he’d rather be literally anywhere else.
Are these Satoru’s… friends? Family? He’s never mentioned them before.
Shoko takes another drag from her cigarette, unfazed. “I’m Shoko, by the way,” she says lazily, exhaling smoke toward the ceiling. “Known Satoru for years. Unfortunately.” She smirks. “This is Kento, Sukuna, and Megumi.”
“H-Hello…” you murmur, gripping the handle of your suitcase as you hold a tight, nervous smile. “Nice to meet you. Sorry for… dropping in like this. I just flew in from America and… I was hoping that — well, Satoru would be here?”
“Gojo?” Sukuna gruffs, leaning back on one elbow. He plucks a piece of pocky from the snack tray and chews it without breaking eye contact. “And who the fuck are you supposed to be? His secret girlfriend or somethin’?”
The words hits harder than it should.
Girlfriend? Secret?
God, what are you to him?
And now, it dawns on you that they haven’t a clue who you are either. Of course, they don’t. Why would they?
You feel your cheeks heat. “O-oh, no. No, it’s not like that,” you say quickly, waving your hand like it’ll brush the embarrassment away. “I mean… we talk. We’ve been talking. But—”
You trail off and they’re all looking at you with raised brows.
“We don’t have a label or anything. We’re just… friends.”
“Friends?” Sukuna perks up, grin widening. “So lemme get this straight. You flew twelve hours across the globe for that pretentious dick?” He scoffs. “And he hasn’t even put a label on you?”
There’s something dangerously amused in his tone now, and he tosses the half-eaten pocky stick back onto the tray.
“Damn. Lucky bastard.”
You blink, unsure whether to feel insulted or embarrassed or both.
"Don’t you worry sweet thing. You decide to stay and I can show ya how a real man can take care of ya, hm?"
Kento shifts, cutting him a glance. “Sukuna…”
“What?” he says, raising both hands innocently. “This girl is hot as fuck. And I’m just saying — if it were me? I’d at least make sure she knew what she was walking into. Or out of. I'm not like that asshole.”
You blink again.
Is he… hitting on you?
“Great... here we go…” Megumi mutters.
And Kento sighs, removing his glasses to rub the bridge of his nose. “Please ignore him,” he tells you, voice calm but firm. “Everything is a pissing contest with Gojo where he’s concerned.”
“Okay, first of all — fuck you,” Sukuna snaps, sitting up straighter now, suddenly defensive. “It’s not about competition. I’m just not blind. Look at her!”
You blush subtly, and Megumi mutters, barely glancing up.
“Don't take him seriously... trust me. He says that. But every time Gojo brings a fangirl around, he's always trying to take her home like it’s a fucking game.”
...fangirl?
The word slams into your chest like a hammer. Is that what they think you are? You stiffen, heart dropping. Because that proves it. You shouldn’t be here. Of course someone like him would get dozens of women throwing themselves at him.
What made you think you were any different?
You shouldn’t have come.
“I-I’m sorry,” you whisper, grip tightening around the suitcase as you fumble to gather your things. “I shouldn’t have… I didn’t mean to barge in. I’ll just—”
And bowing your head, you spin on your heel, until suddenly you collide into someone. But it all happens so quickly; you don’t register who. Because with a gasp, you stumble backwards, entirely focused on how your giftbag slipped from your grip, making Satoru’s scarf fall to the floor.
“W-What… what are you doing here?!”
“Shit, I’m sorry.”
'Sorry' must be your go to word tonight. You’re too embarrassed to look up and see more of Satoru’s friends judging you. You’re dropping on your knees, scrambling to gather things with shaking hands mumbling under your breath.
“I’m leaving now… god, I shouldn’t have come. Please don’t tell Satoru I was—"
“WHOA, is that Gabumon?!” a new voice exclaims, bright with curiosity. “Hey Gojo, who’s this?”
At the mention of his name, you freeze.
Your head slowly lifts, eyes tracing up to catch sight of another pink-haired boy, peeking out from behind the man directly in front of you.
But… the man doesn’t look like Satoru. Not the Satoru you’ve come to know.
No. He has snowy-white tousled hair, tucked beneath a beanie, with bright blue eyes, blinking behind thick-rimmed glasses.
Nothing like his profile pictures.
“Satoru?” you breathe.
His mouth parts, speechless while he’s looking at you like you’re a ghost.
“Dude, that’s so cool! Did you make that?” Yuji asks, eyes sparkling. “Gojo she’s a keeper, huh?”
“Mmm… clearly.” Nanami glances over. “Because since when do you let girls know you like Digimon?”
“About damn time,” Shoko snorts, already lighting another cigarette like this is the most amusing thing she’s seen all week.
“And, she flew here for you,” Sukuna laughs from the back, sounding far too smug for someone uninvolved. “Shit, I’ll marry her if you don’t, asshole.”
The voices layer over each other — praise, laughter, awe. But it’s too bright, too loud, and you’re frozen in the middle of it. Feeling completely detached from reality while the blatant truth stands directly in front of you.
He lied.
And the worst part? You believed him. You came all this way. Mei Mei was right.
Love is dead.
“Um, actually. I—I left something outside,” you blurt, shoving the scarf back in the bag and clutching it to your chest, blinking back the tears. “Excuse me a moment.”
And before anyone can stop you, you’re slipping past them — out the door, out of breath — your chest aching with something you can’t yet name. While behind you, footsteps follow as he calls your name.
“Wait—shit. Wait!”
Satoru knows he fucked up. And by the time he barrels out the front door, you’re already halfway down the street, boots crunching through the snow like you’re marching to war.
He feels like a grade A idiot. Because somehow, against all odds, you — this ridiculously perfect girl — came all the way to Japan thinking he was someone worth showing up for.
And now he’s watching you walk away.
“Waitwaitwaitwait…” he groans, jogging after you, breath puffing white in the air. “Slow down and just… can you just—fuck. Just stop for a second?!”
“Stop?!” You whirl around, eyes wet and furious. “Why should I? Who the fuck even are you? What kind of psycho catfishes someone for months and then just lies to their face?!”
He blinks, defensive instinct kicking in before his brain can catch up.
“W‑Well—what kind of psycho flies across the country and shows up on someone’s front lawn?” he fires back, hands flailing. “In Japan, might I add!”
A bitter scoff tears out of you. “You said—and I quote—‘I wish you were here with me for Christmas,’” your arms fold tight across your chest like you’re holding yourself together. “Why the hell would you say that if you didn’t mean it?”
He backpedals immediately. Because fuck — he did mean it. Every late‑night call. Every laugh. Every stupid wish whispered into the dark.
But instead of admitting that, panic takes over.
“L‑Look—that’s just—something people say, okay?” he rambles. “Like… ‘your baby’s so cute,’ or—um— ‘my diet starts tomorrow,’ or—”
He’s waving his hand, scrambling for humor — something to soften it — but the words die on his lips when he sees your face drop. You blink hard, like something inside you just broke. And the sight of it makes his stomach twist into knots.
Great. Now he feels like even more of an asshole.
“Shit… okay,” he blurts, voice softer now. “That was... yeah. Um. That was a dick move. I know...”
“Fuck you…” you mutter, turning back around.
“Hold up! Please… just come inside, yeah? We can talk it out. If you'll just let me explain—"
“I don’t want to talk to you. Ever again.”
He can hear the hurt underneath the edge of your voice, and he stands there, watching you trudge through the snow – your figure getting smaller against the snow-washed street. He knows there is no salvaging this. He fucked it up. But still… reality slams into him all at once.
You don’t speak the language.
You don’t know the city.
You don’t have a car.
Fuck. Do you even have anywhere to go?
“Fuckfuckfuckfuck… fuck!” he breathes, running a hand through his hair as he begins to jog back toward the house, bursting through the door.
“Guys, I’ll be right back!” he shouts to no one in particular as he grabs his keys off the counter, hands shaking. “She left something at the airport!”
Then, he’s gone again. Chasing the only girl who ever made him feel seen.
It’s cold. Too cold for someone with no plan and no fucking clue where you’re going. But the cold doesn’t sting as much as your heart does.
You don’t even know how far you’ve walked. Five minutes? Ten? Your fingers are numb, your phone battery is nearly dead, and your boots are soaked through.
By pure luck, you stumbled into some sort of Japanese bar. And the kanji on the glowing sign outside might as well be ancient runes, but the warmth spilling through the door felt like something close to safety. Like maybe if you just stepped inside, you’d stop feeling so fucking alone.
Because hey, at least the sake tastes good.
You have no Wi-Fi, no plan, not a single ounce of pride left. All you have is the stupid hope that maybe if you drown yourself in enough of this bitter rice wine, it’ll burn the ache out of your chest.
The edges of the bar blur slightly. Everything’s warm and loud. Someone’s laughing too hard in the corner. Across the room, beyond the haze, there’s a man with a dark bun and violet eyes, sipping from a bottle with his head tilted back.
Beautiful.
Almost like…
The photos on Satoru’s profile?
Are you delusional? Drunk? No... that is him. Right??
You’re blinking through the blur, trying to make sense of it. But then? The room begins to spin and sure enough, nausea hits.
“Shit—” you whisper, grabbing the edge of the bar.
You’re pushing off your stool, stumbling outside the icy curb, before you double over and hurl into the snowbank.
Great. Fucking perfect. Can this day get any worse?
“Hey—hey! There you are!”
Oh, yeah. It can.
Tires crunch as a car jerks to a stop beside the curb. The door flies open, left swinging in the cold and Satoru rushes out, barely remembering to throw the gear into park before he’s crossing to you, boots skidding slightly on slush.
“Jesus—fuck. Are you okay?” he drops beside you, crouching low. “What the hell happened—”
“Don’t touch me,” you snap, pushing at him weakly while your body sways. He pulls back like you burned him.
“I’m fffine,” you slur, though your stomach still churns and your face is damp with cold sweat. “Gooo away.”
He sighs, exasperated.
“You’re not fine. You’re pale and shaking and—wait. Are you… drunk?” He exhales, brushing his hand through his hair like he’s trying not to lose it. “Come on. Let me take you home.”
“Home?” you laugh, bitter and sharp, scoffing as you shove at him again. “You mean your home?”
“No. I meant… wherever you’re safe. I just—can we not do this right now? Please?”
You snort, head lolling as you stare at the ground. “You’re a liarrrr,” you mutter, voice thick and sloppy. “Jus’ like everyone else.”
The words land heavier than he expects. Wind howls between you, carrying the smell of snow and alcohol and regret. Satoru opens his mouth—closes it. For once, he doesn’t have a smart comeback.
“I’m gonna stay right here,” you announce suddenly, sliding down until your back hits the wall. You cross your arms, chin lifting like it’s some kind of moral victory. “I don’t need you.”
“…in the snow?” he asks flatly.
“Yup,” you nod, blinking too hard. “Maybe I’ll meet someone who doesn’t lie for fun.”
“Jesus, woman—” he drags a hand down his face. “You’re in a foreign country. You don’t speak the language. You’re drunk off your ass. I’m not just gonna abandon you in an alley behind a bar you can’t even read the name of!”
“Pffft... well I liiike this bar,” you say bitterly, voice cracking. “S'greeat. They poured the sake fast. And nobody lied to me.”
Every time you say it, it hurts him even more. Satoru exhales hard, pacing a few steps like if he stops moving, he might actually lose it. But when he turns back, ready with another argument — another plea — he freezes.
Because you’re... crying.
Not quiet tears. Not dignified ones. Ugly, shaking sobs that pull from somewhere deep in your chest, shoulders hitching as you scrub at your face with the sleeve of your coat.
“I hate you,” you mutter, voice wrecked.
His chest tightens. He doesn’t know what to do with that. With this.
“I really liked you,” you continue, words tumbling out now, unstoppable. “Like—really liked you. I don’t do this. I don’t fly across the world for people. I don’t—” you hiccup, laughing wetly through the tears. “S'bullshit…” you mutter bitterly.
He blinks, lips pressing in a thin line like he’s unsure what to say. The cold wind blows as you sniffle.
“Plus… you’re hot as fuck. I don’t get it. Like… you didn’t even need to lie…”
You mutter, shifting in the snow. And that one makes him flinch.
“S’stupid… you could’ve jus' been you,” you say, gesturing vaguely at him. “But no. Instead you make up this whole fake version. Lying about everything. Liarrr. And now I can’t trust you. Betcha lied about liking me too, huh? All of it.“
He opens his mouth.
Nothing comes out.
Because that’s the cruel part.
He didn’t lie about everything.
He thinks of the way people’s eyes light up when they recognize his last name. The way conversations shift the second they realize he’s that Gojo. He thinks of years spent being wanted for the wrong reasons — money, status, face value.
And you’re the one person who ever made him feel like it’s okay for liking what he liked. The nerdy, cocky, compulsively sarcastic guy who collects Digimon cards and corrects Wikipedia entries in his spare time.
“Oh yeah… ya know who I saw in there?” you suddenly say, jerking your thumb toward the glowing doorway behind you. “That hot guy from yer pictures.”
Satoru stiffens.
“Uh… Suguru?”
“Oh,” you sniff. “So he’s a real guy?” You laugh again, hollow and dizzy. “Figures. Y’know what? He looks like he wouldn’t lie. Bet he’s honest. Bet he doesn’t make fake profiles and pretend to be someone else.”
You’re too drunk to notice the flinch in his jaw, the way he shifts his weight like the words physically hurt.
“Maybe I’ll go back in and see if he’ll take me home, huh?”
You try to shove off the wall and nearly trip again, but Satoru steadies you without thinking — hands warm and steady under your arms.
“Look…” he murmurs, voice gentler now. “I know you’re mad. And I deserve it. But I’m worried about you.”
His grip adjusts — one hand rising to gently cradle your elbow, the other slipping around to the small of your back as he lowers his head to meet your bleary, mascara-smudged eyes.
“It’s cold,” he says, voice pitched just above a whisper. “It’s late. You’re probably jet-lagged out of your mind. Just… come back to the house with me, alright? Sleep it off. And if you still hate me in the morning—fine. I’ll even help you hook up with Suguru… if you want.”
Your head jerks back slightly, eyes narrowing. “W-What?” You squint at him, breath curling white between you. “Seriously?”
He shrugs with the ghost of a smile, though it doesn’t reach his eyes. “I mean, me and him used to be friends. I’m your best bet.”
“That’s insane,” you mutter.
“I’m aware,” he says dryly. Then, more cautiously: “All I’m asking is that you pretend to be my girlfriend. Just until Christmas is over.”
You scoff, half stumbling again as you try to push away from him. “Why the hell would I do that?”
He hesitates. Then breathes out through his nose, gaze flicking away for a second.
“Because… you saw how excited my friends were to meet you. I don’t have a great relationship with my family, okay? Those guys… they’re all I have. I’ve spent holidays alone more years than I haven’t.” His voice cracks a little, just a hair. “I don’t wanna ruin this one… please?”
Something in your expression softens. It hits you all at once, stupid and sharp: how close he is. How blue his eyes are. Maybe it’s the crack in his voice, or the tired honesty in his face, or the fact that for the first time tonight, he doesn’t look like a liar. He just looks… sad.
“…okay,” you whisper. “Fine. Let’s just… go.”
But when you step forward, you falter slightly, ankle twisting in the snow, and he moves without hesitation — an arm looping under yours, the other bracing your elbow as he helps you upright.
“Shit—okay. Easy, sweetheart. I got you,” he murmurs, adjusting his grip.
And maybe it’s the alcohol, or the heartbreak, or the fact that your guard’s been sanded down to nothing. But for a second? You let yourself lean into him. Just a little. Just enough.
He guides you carefully toward the car. The passenger door creaks open. He ducks down to guide you in, one hand braced above your head so you don’t hit it on the frame. His other hand lingers at your lower back. You glance up at him in the doorway.
“Do you… really think Suguru would like me?”
There’s a flicker in his expression. Then a tight smile.
“I think… he’d be lucky if he did.”
You frown, unsure how to read that. But you don’t press.
He closes the door behind you, gently. And as he rounds the car to take his seat, you rest your head against the window — watching snow dust the windshield like ash.
It’s going to be a long Christmas.
The drive home was quiet. When Satoru glanced through the rearview mirror, he realized you were out cold before he even hit the second red light. Your head was tilted against the window, lips slightly parted, breathing deep and even.
You looked impossibly beautiful.
By the time he pulled into the driveway, the snow picked up again, soft and powdery in the glow of the porch light. Satoru kills the engine and glances at you one more time.
“Hey… uh. We’re here?”
But you don’t wake. And honestly, he can’t find it in his heart to wake you himself. So instead, he sighs, “C’mon, sleeping beauty…” climbing out and circling the car. “Right… well. Up and at ‘em.”
He lifts you gently, bridal style. And your head lolls against his shoulder, warm breath ghosting across his collar. When he adjusts his grip, you snuggle closer, burrowing into the crook of his neck. And he tries to act like his brain wasn’t short-circuiting.
As he approaches the estate’s entrance, the door slides open before he can knock. Yuji stands there with a bag of chips in one hand and a soda in the other.
“Woah. Dude. She okay?”
“What?! Of course!” Satoru huffs. “She’s fine. Just—tired. Long flight. Jet lag hit her hard, y’know?”
Yuji nods solemnly. “RIP.”
Satoru rolls his eyes. “Move. Gotta put her to bed.”
Yuji moves. Nobody presses further. Satoru doesn’t stop in the hallway, just takes the stairs two at a time, heading straight for his room, nudging the door open with his foot while he eases you inside.
He lowers you onto the bed slowly, like you might break. Your coat bunches beneath you, and he hesitates — then gently shrugs it off your shoulders, exposing some of your bare skin. You murmur something incoherent, head rolling to the side.
“Shhh… time to get some rest, sweetheart…” he breathes. “Lay back for me, yeah?”
As you lay back, he slips your boots off next, one at a time, fingers brushing your ankles. And god, your feet are freezing.
But as he’s reaching for the blanket—
“Mmmph.”
Your hand fumbles blindly and finds his shirt, tugging him down with you. He stumbles forward slightly, one knee landing on the edge of the bed, catching himself on his palms as you tug him down. Your arms wrap loosely around his waist, burying your face into his chest.
“W-Woah—hey,” he breathes, voice cracking a little. “You’re—uh. Kinda clinging there, huh?”
You don’t answer. You just… sigh. Sleepy and content. He lies beside you, unsure where to put his hands, heart racing. You’re cold. He can feel the way you press into him, like he’s the warmest thing in the world. Your fingers bunch his shirt. Your nose nuzzles the fabric.
“Mm… s’toru…”
His heart flutters, and he knows you’ll probably hate him again in the morning, but he doesn’t move.
Because he likes the way you cling to him. Because he’s selfish. Because the girl he lied to for weeks is now curled up in his bed, face pressed to his ribs, saying his name like she’s dreamt it a hundred times.
So, he sleeps beside you that night. Pretending, just for now, that none of it was a lie.
‘I keep thinking… if this is what you’re like over the phone, what the hell am I gonna do if I ever see you in person?’
You’re dreaming again.
Of his voice — that voice. Warm and easy. The one that used to call you at midnight, laughing through the line like it was nothing, like you weren’t slowly losing your mind for a stranger you’d never met.
‘Cause… I really love talking to you. Might just get addicted to you, sweetheart.’
You sigh, stirring slightly against the warmth pressed to you. It’s a heavy, encompassing warmth – like you’ve been swaddled in sunlight and something sweet. There’s an arm draped languidly around your waist, and a thumb twitching against your lower back.
Dreaming.
“Mmph…”
Your thighs are warm, tangled, clinging to something… hard. You wiggle your hips as the rhythm of breathing ebbs and flows beneath you. And that movement makes a low, sleepy sound rumble against your chest.
“Fffuck…”
The groan isn’t innocent, and your brow furrows with a whimper as something firm twitches between your legs. Beginning to grow. A hand flexes at your back, and you instinctively press your thighs tighter, making him gasp.
“Unngh… b-baby…”
As your eyes flutter open, fluttering against his skin, you’re greeted with the slope of his throat, pale in the gray morning light. And the throbbing heat between your legs makes it undeniable now.
This isn’t a dream. This isn’t your bed. This isn’t your blanket. And your thighs are straddling Satoru’s hips with his morning wood right there and holy shit—
“S-Satoru?!”
You squeak. And his brow twitches, snowy lashes fluttering, lips parting on a sleepy inhale. When his hazy gaze focuses, you’re met with that blue. Bluer than the sky, bluer than anything should be this early in the goddamn morning.
But then, awareness sinks in, and he stutters. “H-Huh…?” gaze flicking down to the very compromising position you’re both in.
“Shit!” his voice cracks as you shove at his chest, face molten.
“Oh my god—why the hell are we sleeping together?!” you shriek, and he’s desperately trying to explain. “I—You—” he wheezes as you push his again. “Ow, okay, damn, don’t commit a felony! You literally pulled me into the bed when you were drunk. And then you passed out on top of me! I’m the victim here!”
Your hands are still on his chest, mid-push. But you stop. Breath catching. Eyes locking.
You stare at him.
He stares at you.
You both look down at his dick.
“…so,” he mutters, throat bobbing as his eyes flick back up to your face—very carefully avoiding your chest, failing miserably. “You, uh… gonna move?”
“R-Right!” your cheeks erupt in flames as you scramble off him like he’s on fire, nearly tripping over the bed. “Shit—sorry—I didn’t mean to…”
“No, it’s uh… fine. Totally fine.” He mumbles with an awkward laugh. “I mean… not that I’m complaining… but damn. If this is how you serve breakfast in America? I might need to move and—”
“Don’t.” You snap, making him freeze. “Don’t say that…”
Your arms are crossed as you stand, pressing your lips together tightly. His expression instantly drops, the humor fading. And god. You want to be mad at him. You should be mad.
But mostly?
Last night comes flashing back – your drunk, pathetic sob story. And really, you just feel… humiliated.
“You don’t get to make jokes right now,” your tone trembles as you try to hold it tight. “Not after last night. Not after I flew across the world for someone who doesn’t exist. For some who—” you trail off, failing to find words that don’t sound even more pathetic. And scoff. “God… I’m such an idiot…”
There’s a long pause. Satoru’s quiet, but then you hear him sigh.
“…you’re not. You’re not an idiot.”
Your eyes flick over as you watch him shift upright, pushing a hand through his messy hair. His expression softens, vibrant eyes dimming with a tenderness. And for once, it doesn’t feel like he’s reaching for some smartass line to soften to blow.
“I told you… I shouldn’t have lied. Okay? I know that…” he scratches the back of his head, knowing there’s no excuse he can give you that’ll make him sound any less pathetic. He exhales, pushing on. “Look… just stay until Christmas. Please? I’ll do everything I can to make it up to you. Even… hook you up with Suguru, like I said.”
He hesitates as he says it. But that’s what you want… right? After all, you expected him. You expected Suguru.
You blink, mouth parting as your conversation at the bar comes crashing back towards your foggy memory. You’d said it to spite him. You were drunk and stupid and humiliated, and you just wanted to wound him.
Because you liked him.
You really, really wanted it to be real.
Your mouth parts. You’re about to answer when your phone buzzes.
Mei: How’s Japan, darling? Is he real? I expect those lines~
You stare at the screen. Something twists in your chest — not quite a laugh, not quite a sob. And with a bitter smile, you tuck the phone away.
“Right…” you mutter, rubbing your arm nervously. “Uh… sure. I guess I’ll stay.”
a/n. hello my darlings. merry christmas, i hope you all are enjoying your holiday! i will have pt 2 out before the end of december, lmk if you wanna be tagged. this fic kinda gives me supermodel! gojo vibes? at least with the message it's exploring. hehe. anyways, love you all. thanks for reading 💖
part 2 >>>
you've got a text! looks like you're about to spend your summer on everyone's favorite trashy reality dating show searching for love (...or that cash prize at the end) will a certain pretty (annoying) blue-eyed boy catch your attention? or perhaps his dark-haired best friend? it seems this villa has a few bombshells in store too!
pairings: Gojo x Reader, Geto x Reader, Sukuna x Reader, Nanami x Reader, Choso x Reader
content: MDNI, fluff and smut and light angst, making out, piv sex, handjobs, fingering, oral (m! + f! receiving), threesome, silly summer fun, references to reality tv tropes ofc, lots of games/challenges inspired by love island, secondhand embarrassment, jealousy, evil TV show producers (cough gege cough), misc random jjk pairings as background couples, lots of teasing and tension, friends-to-lovers, exes-to-lovers, you name it, it's probably here lol
polls will go up to determine who goes on dates and challenges with our reader - it's up to you to decide who gets sent home or who gets saved at the end of certain episodes! first poll posted here, future polls will all be tagged with #re: coupled up! <3
creds: gorgeous art by @baobei-bu and divider by @animatedglittergraphics-n-more
patreon is here with additional original content for anyone who feels like supporting me a little extra :3
You didn't even need to open the apartment door to know that he was already inside. God knows how or why, but after months of incessant stalking (or, as he liked to call it, "necessary surveillance"), a sixth sense had been developed at the back of your mind on the whereabouts of your newly found shadow.
With a simple click of keys and a sigh, the door creaked as it gave way, the sight before you nothing short of predictable.
On the old couch lay Jason, helmet off and placed on the table, the shiny red material glistening underneath the afternoon sun as he held a book in his hand. Jason's eyes never left the thing, not even for a second, especially not when you all but tossed your bag loudly onto the floor and stomped all the way towards him, the floorboards squeaking as if they would give in.
"What are you doing here ?!"
"Hi princess."
The sounds of your voices speaking at the same time felt bizarre. Your apartment, the sweet place which cost you a fortune and a half was now contaminated with this rat.
As if he could read your thoughts, Jason smirked, his voice rumbling with amusement as he casually turned over to the next page, his gaze still not meeting yours. His gear lay nearby, some guns strewn across the floor, bullets all neatly set on your new coffee table, the wood still shiny due to it being polished this morning.
From the corner of your eye, you noticed some flowers on the table, the vase a simple one made of glass. Jason likely brought them as a gift, likely to both mock and claim his territory on the place.
"Well?" said Jason with a quirked eyebrow, his tone casual.
"Wanna take a seat in your own home?"
Oh this asshole. This self serving, wicked, twisted man wanted to play house? You saw red, vision becoming more blurry by the second, that stupid suit of his somehow making him look even more infuriating than he already was.
Wordlessly, you swiftly lowered your hand and grabbed his own, fingers digging deep into the flesh, leaving crescent shaped marks in their way.
Only then did he bother to look at you.
And boy, did he have a look.
Amused laughter fills the apartment, the sound of his voice all but a shrill in your ears as you tried to drag him up with all the force you could muster. Your fingers almost became claw-like with how you gripped him, the skin even tearing slightly, small droplets of blood coming out as Jason cackled.
"You should see your face! I'd take a picture if I could!" said Jason as he threw his head back, shoulders shaking in utter delight. The book now lay on the floor, completely forgotten as you tried to move the wall of a man up, to get him out of your god damn house -
Until he turned the tables on you.
He always had a way to make you feel small. Every time you felt as though you could win, no matter how miniscule, Jason would always one-up you. Sometimes you wondered if he was superhuman with how he moved, how swiftly he switched places and now you were at his mercy.
You couldn't even get a scream out before his large palm covered your lips, a soft shhhh echoing past his lips as he held your wrists with his other hand. Making you sit on the couch was a piece of cake for him, made even easier when he sat on top of you, pressing his full weight as he pinned you in place. His touch was always oddly gentle as you've come to notice, which made you want to rip out his throat with your teeth even more.
Jason always liked to say that you needed him. Who would protect you if he wasn't around? A simple crook could easily just bust down your door and... And the rest isn't even worth thinking about.
Especially not while he's still alive and kicking. When it came to your safety, he honestly didn't care about anyone's opinion, sometimes not even about your own. If he couldn't see you with his own two eyes, feel you with his own hands and kiss you till he drops dead then what's the point?
He could live like this, Jason reckons. Even if you hate him, even if all you feel is complete and utter contempt for him, he'll take on all your anger if it means you stay alive.
adrian being so deeply whipped by you to the point where he can never stop talking! ✩‧₊ 𝜗𝜚
cw: fem!reader, light PiV smut! slightly pervy adrian (if you squint) minors and ageless blogs dni!!!
“does he have an off button?” an initial thought of yours that promptly became a consistent conviction. the guy just couldn’t shut up. with Adrian, the accustomed “hi,” or “morning!” fabricated into a string of unintelligible words, desperate for conversation. There’d be compliments, random ones like “has that shirt always been that form fitting?” or whatever other weird shit he could come up with before you parted ways, leaving him alone only with the appreciativeness that you fled the scene before he could inadvertently sputter something disgusting. perhaps like the frequent shameful idea etched in his brain of his dick fucking your cum covered tits and your mouth wrapped around his leaking tip.
silent car rides in his sebring would immediately be filled by irrelevant conversation. he’d pester you about something he saw on National Geographic last night and practically beg you to quiz him on his knowledge. this week it’s birds.
“i’m serious! i’m like a freak when it comes to this stuff, go ahead.”
even after a million variations of “thanks, but i’m good adrian” you could always tell when he was still just itching to say something as he continuously adjusted himself. little did you know it was admittedly because of how painfully hard you made him with the amount of times you spoke his name, surpassing the count of times he pictured you breathlessly bouncing on his cock in his car.
and to Adrian’s surprise, when you finally do give him the time of day, he found himself still uncontrollably prattling. pretty praises slurring from his lips as he pounded into you.
“you kinda—fuck—remind me of a Barred owl—they squeeze the shit outta their prey.”
unlike him you can only whine in return, face smushed against your drool covered pillow sheets, your brain only filled with thoughts of him balls deep inside you, dumb in comparison as he bottomed out.
“and their eyes —fuuuck—you’re making a mess all over me baby—they’re actually tubes it’s fucking insane.”