āIām sure I can afford that.ā He responded, her small and slightly uneasy smile was infectious, causing him to follow suite. His lips curled slightly to end his reply. āThanks, Hina.ā
Hinami had changed in physicalities, but her morals and personality stayed relatively the sameā¦Ayato however had changed drastically. A couple of years ago, if he was asked to guard and protect Hinami he would have immaturely refused, or ditched her as soon as they arrived. But getting through his last teenage years with her and being trained by a strict teacher, had calmed him significantly. The young man was now more understanding, collected and became a firm and respected leader. He cared about his team, Hinami especially. He often spoke to her, almost counselling her and giving her a chance to let out emotions she may otherwise bottle up. He knew she wouldnāt tell him everything, and that was fine, so long as she found some solace in his wordsā¦
His smile faded a little and he looked ahead at the building. āOkay, I got your back, try focusing on themā¦ā
āRight,ā she murmured, their small talk all but ended by the reminder that they were on a mission, and that their objective was at hand. The girlās lips pursed as one last glance of soft brown told her that they had not drawn attention yet.
Her head tilted forward, eyes closing tightly-- having to focus so carefully on hearing every bit of information drew sharply on her abilities, sometimes to the point her kakugan would activate. Sheād keep them closed, but it meant that she wouldnāt be able to see any approach. It was easy enough to pretend to have a headache, tilting slightly in Ayatoās direction as she lifted one hand to cover her expression from her forehead. A trained investigator could see the rise of the veins from her dark eyes even when closed, and rather than cup her ears to focus her hearing, sheād have to simply hide her face. ā...Two people discussing the island base.ā Her tone was low, hushed in a murmur as she struggled through the dull roar of the city around her to close in on the conversation she sought out, muffled not by the noise around it, but by the thick walls meant to block from most eavesdroppers.
















