#I get acute mono-no aware poisoning every time I look at him
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
People rebutting the "Childe is 34" theory, have you considered this.
No way he would have survived that long with his lifestyle.
#it's all the proof I need#honestly#have you seen him#boys like this don't survive past 30#I get acute mono-no aware poisoning every time I look at him#childe#tartaglia#genshin impact#I still hc he's 19 at the time of liyue arc#he behaves like he's 19#(my oddly specific headcanons)#and character stories put him somewhere in the 18-22 range#why are we even arguing#and we don't even need time fuckery for him to be declared guilty tbh#the whale 'left traces on him' as skirk says#and that could be enough for the oratrice to mistake him for the whale/willing accomplice#also#I don't know about you#but I prefer to see him as someone brilliant but very young#and not someone 34yo and incredibly stupid#(because if a person still behaves like that at 34 they are not smart)
188 notes
·
View notes
Text
Never Tell Me The Odds [3/31]
Temporary Blanket DisclaimerÂ
 AN: I am still not completely sold on this chapter, but itâs better than what I had written before, so Iâll go with it. Unedited. Also, burgeoning hints of NaruSaku in this chapter and this chapter only, but itâs not endgame, and itâs there for a reason.
Warnings: Description of panic attacks and associated symptoms; somewhat racist/ignorant comments from OCs, also lead-up to a physical assault which may cause victims of robbery/harassment/assault to possibly feel triggered. You have been warned.
Beta Reader: No one but me just yet.
First Chapter
Chapter Three: Chemistry
Sakuraâs acceptance to Harvard is a shock, a sudden upset to Sasukeâs carefully crafted future which he didnât see coming and didnât think to prepare for. She never even told him she had applied, and whenever theyâve discussed the future lately itâs gravitated around the all-but-established understanding that they would be attending Keio together.
To know that sheâs thinking of going somewhere else, he is overcome by an instant, acute sense of panic.
Which is why when Sakura asks him for advice, he has to fight his first instinct, which is to tell her the one thing he knows would stop her from going: that she wonât be able to handle it. Sakura has always had trouble with self-confidence, and if he were to tell her he doubted her abilities, she would instantly abandon the idea.
Within a half-second of thinking it, he immediately experiences a pit form in his belly and a shiver of wrongness up his spine.
Sakura is kind and good and smart, and she is more than capable of succeeding wherever she goes. One day she is going to be a world-renowned doctor, and she should go where she can get the best education possible. More than that, he thinks she would thrive in any of the collegeâs programs. If anyoneâs happiness is important to him, itâs Sakuraâs.
Though she isnât aware of his mental lapse, he tries to erase it by immediately telling her that she has to go.
But his brain is already racing, trying to figure out how he can let her achieve her own greatness without giving her up entirely. He barely notices her mutter something about dinner and leave, because he is on his computer, scouring Harvardâs website and making notes about the admission process on a nearby notepad.
Itâs March now, and their graduation mere weeks away; the second round of applications is over. There is a third round in April, which means he would probably know for sure by MayâŠwhich is not ideal, since third round applications mean fewer acceptances.
But itâs an option.
Within a matter of hours, he has prepared his own application and portfolio and then picks up his phone to text Sakuraâonly to decide that itâs better not to say anything until he knows.
She never said explicitly that she had decided on Harvard, and thereâs an infinitesimal chance I donât get in. Getting both our hopes up will help no one.
No, itâs better to wait and see. At least until he finds out exactly what her plans are. Until then, itâs better to act as if Keio is still their default. If anything, he can ask her about it tomorrow.
Except, he doesnât see Sakura the next day.
Or the next.
With this puzzling fact compounded by Sakura not returning his texts or inquiring emails, Sasuke decides to head over to her house to see her. Not because heâs worried (even if he is), but because her birthday is next week and he wants to make arrangements with her. Thereâs an escape room thatâs just opened near the downtown core, and it looks like something theyâd both enjoy.
When he gets to Sakuraâs home, he finds his way in barred by Kizashi.
âSorry, Sasuke, Sakuraâs not feeling great today,â he tells him, sympathy on his face but a strange firmness in his tone that leaves no room for argument. âSheâll catch up with you when sheâs up to it.â
The door is already closing on him before he has entirely processed this; puzzled, he turns and walks away from the house. Itâs almost unheard of, Sakura not wanting to see him, sick or notâhe was even allowed to visit her the year she had mono. There are only two instances she ever refused to see him, both times when she had food poisoning.
Maybe thatâs what it is, he decides, shrugging off his uneasy feeling. And if itâs notâŠwell, girls are weird. However much he cares about Sakura, heâs the first to admit that she has some strange quirks. Maybe sheâs doing one of those cleanse things he finds so ridiculous.
Heâll ask her about it when sheâs back to normal.
ă”ăčă±
To his eternal shame, he doesnât notice until itâs too late. By then, the damage is done.
Itâs not as though he and Sakura live in each otherâs pockets, so it takes him a few days before he realises that something is very wrong. By then, the new world order has been established and stretches into the final weeks of their school year.
She doesnât answer the door when he comes by on Monday morning, which he supposes means sheâs sick, until Mebuki tells him that sheâs already left with Ino. When he arrives at school, Sakura is ensconced on the other side of class, surrounded by a bunch of rambunctious girls and she doesnât even look at him.
He tries to speak to her between classes, but there is always a wall of chatting, laughing girls around, and when he gets close Shikamaru and ChĆji are suddenly there to tell him the teacher needs to speak with him or Shino wants to go over their homework questions before handing them in for class.
It doesnât end there.
When he does work up the courage to try to breech the wall of people, with the eyes of everyone on them, she always has excuses not to meet him for studying or one of their rambling walks in the park. When he asks her about it by text or email, all he receives in return are one-word texts and emoji assurances that everything is fine or she doesnât have time.
Frustration mounts with every day that passes, and then thereâs that baffling encounter at in the school hallway. The chill-inducing news that sheâs moving to another countryâthat she has decided on Harvard after allâand her mystifying declaration that she intends to find âsomething more thanâŠthan this.â
And then Ino whisks her away again.
Once heâs recovered from the shock, Sasukeâs brain starts working again, zeroing in on the common factor in all of this.
Harvard.
Girl friends.
Avoiding him.
Ino.
The universe may be conspiring against him communicating with Sakura, but Ino is another matter entirely. They both take Economics this year, and so before she can pack up her books and head to her next class, he corners her.
âWhat did you do to Sakura?â he demands.
Ino gapes at him, first in shock, but this is quickly overtaken by anger. âExcuse me? What did I do to Sakura? Youâre joking, right?â
âNo,â he replies. âSheâs avoiding me. And every time I try to ask her why, you and your cabal of nattering hens show up to keep me from getting near her.â
Ino sniffs. âThen maybe you should take the hint.â
âI want to know whatâs going on.â
âSheâll tell you when sheâs ready.â
âNo, youâll tell me, now.â
âOr what?â Ino snaps. âYouâll get your father to torpedo my familyâs company or something? You donât scare me, SasukeÂ-kun. And even if you did, I still wouldnât tell you anything because Sakura doesnât want me to.â
âI have a right to know whatâs going on.â
âWhy?â Ino challenges.
âBecause sheâsâŠâ he trails off, hesitating when it comes to finding the right word to describe what Sakura is to him.
Ino crosses her arms, frowning at him like sheâs trying to decipher something. âIs this you trying to convince me you actually care about her?â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â he demands, because of all the stupid statements in the world, he never figured Ino to be the one to voice that particular one.Â
âSheâs my best friend, itâs my business. And youâre sort of my friend too, so let me give you some advice: if you care about Sakura even a littleâmore importantly, if you respect her, you need to back off. Sheâs working through something right now and needs space, and every time you get close to her, you mess her up.â
This brings him up short.
âMess her up,â he repeats, uncomprehending.
âYou two need to learn how to be apart without falling apart,â Ino goes on. âI wonât argue that thereâs always been something between you two, but over the years itâs gotten unhealthy. So, back off a bit. And trust her to approach you when sheâs ready to.â
She sweeps away then, leaving Sasuke pondering exactly what she means.
The suggestion that his behaviour is somehow hurting Sakura gives him pause, as itâs the last thing he wants. If what Ino says is true, Sakura will explain it all when the time is right. And itâs entirely possible that Ino could be right about the other thingâif Sakura goes to Harvard, and Sasuke doesnât get in, then they will have to get used to being apart.
So, perhaps this is practice for the future. Looking at it in utilitarian terms like that, he can better accept it. Heâs still a little annoyed Sakura couldnât just tell him that to his face, and he intends to tell her so when he next speaks to her, but until then, he can give her what she wants.
Space.
He thinks.
Just in case, though, he accepts his fatherâs suggestion of working a part-time data-entry job at the company during his free time. Father thinks it shows initiative, wanting to get to know the company before starting work there, and Mother says heâll learn how to network and make new friends.
âBetter you than me,â Itachi snorts when Sasuke tells him the news, and then forces him into an apron to help him serve during the lunch rush.
The whole ploy is only semi-effective. While Sasuke carries out his duties with ease, his work hours and study hours taking up whatever time isnât spent sleeping, heâs very conscious that thereâs some element missing.
Some person.
The last weeks of school rush by, and then exams, and then heâs accepting his high school diploma. Thereâs barely time to speak to Sakura at graduationâas valedictorian and the winner of several prizes that year, she has a lot of hands to shake and people to thank. Mother somehow manages to snap a picture of the two of them together, but thereâs about a foot of distance between them and the whole two minutes are sickeningly awkward. Sasuke is almost relieved when Itachi shows up to congratulate him, and suddenly the entire event is overshadowed by his fatherâs glowering disapproval and motherâs insistence that they should leave now.
This more than anything puts a dent into his decision to give Sakura space, because he has never felt awkward or uncomfortable in her presence before, and feels to him as if a physical constant has been grotesquely altered. Â
At the end of May, Sasuke gets his acceptance from Harvard. His father isnât exactly pleased about it, but grants that Harvard is a world-renowned school and it will look good for the future if he goes. And, even Itachi couldnât get into Harvard.
(Sasuke doesnât bother pointing out Itachi wasnât interested enough to try.)
Sasuke decides that day that enough is enough and he will talk to Sakura today, even if he has to sit outside her home until she walks through the door. He pockets his acceptance letter, and also brings along an offering of dango from Itachiâs restaurant.
(Because she likes sweets, and not because heâs trying to endear himself to her.)
Kizashi answers the door, looking surprised to see him.
âI need to speak to Sakura,â Sasuke tells him. âItâs important and Iâm not going anywhere until she comes out to speak to me.â
âYouâll be waiting a long time,â Sakuraâs father says, bemused. âShe left for Boston this morning.â
âSheâŠleft,â Sasuke repeats, uncomprehending.
Kizashi scratches his cheek. âI thought it strange you didnât come see her off.â
âI didnât,â a voice grumbles, and then Sakuraâs mother is framed in the doorway as well. âI thought he was being sensible for once. Whatever you did to my daughter, you should leave her alone. Itâs unkind to string someone along, young man, and I hope this is a lesson to you.â
âStringâŠ?â
âNow, hold on, Mebuki, you donât know what happened,â Kizashi protests. âSakura never said anything had happenedââ
âI didnât need her to say it, I sensed there was something. A mother always knows, after all.â
âMaybe, but you canât justâwhoa! Kid, are you alright? You look pale.â
Their voices seem to be coming from far away, and his knees appear to be rebelling against holding the rest of him but, but Sasuke simply turns away.
âIâm fine,â he answers, his throat feeling like knives with the effort needed to make that sound neutral.
Sakuraâs parents might call after him, but he doesnât hear them.
He doesnât really notice anything after that, one moment bleeding into another, until he is abruptly back in his brotherâs restaurant, breathing into a paper bag.
His lungs burn with every gasp for breath around the lump in his throat, heart racing so fast he expects it to just give out, and the world spinning in a sickening swirl of colour. His entire frame is shaking, and he hasnât had a panic attack so bad since he was eight and a drunk driver nearly robbed him of his family.
While his parents and brother fought for their lives in surgery, he was left alone in a waiting room surrounded by relatives talking about what would happen to the company if Fugaku died. No one cared that he was sitting right there, and that his family werenât dead yet. He had such a severe reaction that they needed to sedate him. After it was over, his relatives mocked him for his panic and even after he recovered, Father chided him for losing his composure.
Heâs kept such weakness at bay for years, and even Sakura has never seen him in such a state. He had thought heâd conquered it by now, but judging by the letter clenched in his hand and the crushed package of dango on the floor, he hasnât.
Eventually sounds permeate the rushing noise in his ears, and he makes out his brotherâs voice.
âSasuke, can you hear me?â
âYes.â
âCan you tell me what happened?â
âShe didnât say goodbye,â Sasuke replies dimly. It should explain everything, but apparently this concept is too beyond his supposedly genius brother, because over the next fifteen minutes Itachi keeps teasing small details out of him.
Itâs annoying, but it forces Sasuke to focus.
While Shisui boils water for tea, Itachi slowly pries out the whole story, which takes a while because every time he opens his mouth, Sasuke expects he might throw up. The nausea that has been lurking behind his frustration the past few weeks appears to have exploded, and his chest aches like itâs been scraped out by a spoon, and he has the absurd, infantile impulse to burst into tears.
Eventually Itachi sits back, a confused expression on his face.
âI know Sakura, and it would have to be something pretty serious to happen for her to leave you without saying goodbye,â Itachi tells him quietly. âSheâs been in love with you since you were little kids.â Sasuke nods jerkily at this, which makes Itachi raise an eyebrow. âYouâreâŠnot surprised by this.â
âIt was understood,â Sasuke says, concentrating on enunciating every word. âShe didnât exactly hide it.â
âSo, all this time, you two have been together?â
âOf course.â
Itachi shakes his head, frowning in something like disappointment. âThen what could make the kindest, most understanding girl in the world not tell her boyfriend she was leaving the country.â Sasuke scowls. âWhat?â
âThatâs such an insipient word.â
ââŠBoyfriend?â This time itâs both of his eyebrows that raise heavenward, and then comprehension dawns. âSasukeâŠcan I ask you something?â
âYouââ
âDonât feel the need to point out that I just did.â
âTch.â
âIn all this timeâall this planning of yours, encouraging Sakura to do her best and succeed and you keeping her nearby so you could have a future togetherâdid you ever, even just one time, tell her how you feel about her?â
âShe knows.â
âAnd what if she doesnât?â
âShe has an IQ of 170, sheâs not stupid.â
âI didnât say she was,â Itachi replies slowly. âBut sometimes peopleâwomen especiallyârequire certain things to be stated in specific terms. So, Iâll ask you again: have you ever, in your entire relationship with Sakura, told her that youâŠhave feelings for her?â
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
The world seems to crystalize around him and itâs as if something audible clicks into place.
âOh.â
Itachi exhales tiredly and hands Sasuke the cup of tea. âTell me everything that happened the last time you spoke to Sakura.â
Curious if thereâs something he missed, Sasuke forces himself to concentrate, casting his mind back to the last few face-to-face interactions heâs had with Sakura. When he relates her question about dating, Itachi inhales sharply, and as he points out his argument about Sakura needing to go to Harvard because there was nothing here for her, Shisuiâs hand slaps against his forehead.
âSasukeâŠjustâŠthink about how all that sounded,â his brother suggests tightly.
âTo a normal person that doesnât have the emotional range of a teaspoon,â Shisui adds.
Sasuke is quiet, factoring in what he knows of Sakuraâs temperament, and how, based on past experience, she may have interpreted what he said to her.
His eyes widen.
âShit.â
âI think thatâs an appropriate assessment,â Itachi agrees wearily.
âFace it, kid, you fucked up,â Shisui says with a whistle.
âI can fix this,â Sasuke says decisively, and stands up. âA simple explanation should clear this up. And if she wonât answer me by conventional means, the airport isnât far. Iâll go to Boston and find her and tell her in person.â
âI wouldnât do that,â his brother says.
This brings him up short. âWhat?â
âYou mean aside from all the practical, logistical details?â Shisui deadpans, but goes quiet when Itachi sends him a warning look.
âFor two reasons,â Itachi goes on. âFirst of all, Sakura obviously needs some space to recover. She did leave for a reason. If you thinking sheâs just left you behind without warning effect you like this, chances are sheâs going through her own difficulties. I imagine what you said to her broke her heart.â
Sasuke begins to protest, but Shisui interrupts. âItachiâs right. And thatâs something that will have to heal before sheâs in the right mind to listen to you again. She might be angry, she might be sad, but sheâs definitely going to be hurt. And people donât like to be around the things that hurt them, much less listen to whatever groveling you intend to do.â
âThe second reason is for your own sake,â Itachi continues.
ââŠMy sake?â
âSasuke, you just had a panic attack when you realised Sakura was gone,â his brother points out gently. âThatâs only one example of an extreme reaction. We are a family that is run by our emotions and temperament. You wouldnât want to do something to harm Sakura.â
âI would never harm Sakura,â Sasuke snaps, disgusted.
âNot intentionally. But I think before you pursue her, you should be very sure of what it is you want to pursue, and whether itâs even healthy for you. Both of you. Right now, from what Iâve seen, you are heavily dependant on her. Itâs unhealthy. And I take some responsibility for that.â
This temporarily distracts him. âYou?â
âI wasnât around enough when you were younger,â Itachi explains, apologetic. âI didnât encourage you to make other friends or teach you how to be alone in a healthy manner. Youâve never even had a friend before Sakura or outside of her. And even thatâs a different case, because youâve made clear that she is more than your friend.â
âThe point heâs trying to make is, if youâre going to go halfway around the world, it shouldnât just be to follow a girl,â Shisui interjects âGo for your own sake, and your own future.â
âSakura is my future,â Sasuke replies without hesitation. This is as basic a fact to him as the concept of plants converting oxygen into carbon dioxide.
âSheâs part of it,â Itachi shakes his head. âSheâs not all of it.â
Sasuke clenches his fist in frustration, trying to hide the sudden wave of vulnerability and exhaustion that settles over him. âSo what the hell am I supposed to do?â
âWell, if youâre set on Harvard, term starts in August. Iâd say you have three months to figure it all out,â Itachi says.
ă”ăŻă©
Term might not start until August, but Sakura ends up glad she and Ino decided to spend the summer settling in to their new home.
The first few weeks are spent in a whirlwind of activity, as Inoâs parents help the two of them move into their dorm and learn to navigate the vast, sprawling campus that is Harvard. She is so busy learning where everything is located and which administrator she has to speak to for help with her courses and how the transit system here works, that she barely has time to call her parents, let alone other people.
Specific other people.
There are half a dozen unopened emails from Sasuke in her inbox, which hover reproachfully at the back of her mind even as Inoâs parents ferry them through city tours and furniture warehouses. Sheâs been meaning to contact him since landing in Boston, but every time she gets up the courage, anxiety over what he might say rears its ugly head.
At least she doesnât have to worry about text messages anymore, since her phone doesnât work here. She doesnât have to ask Ino to screen them anymore, which she hated doing.
None of this assuages her guilt, but at least her eventful days can put it out of mind temporarily.
Just because term hasnât started doesnât mean she and Ino are left on an empty campus. As soon as they arrive, they are introduced by their dorm advisor to the other suitemates. Thereâs Tenten, a friendly and forthright girl from Hong Kong, who introduces herself right away.
âIâm going to be an Applied Engineer,â she tells them without needing to be prompted. âWhatâs the point of building stuff if you canât actually use it?â
Then thereâs Temari, an aloof young woman with an accent Sakura canât quite place, who reveals noncommittally that sheâs studying government.
âItâs what my family does,â she states, and will volunteer no more.
Finally, thereâs Karui, a proud native of New York who intends to major in both Mathematics and Womenâs Studies.
âI couldnât decide which one I preferred, so Iâll just do both,â she says, when the other girlsâ express amazement at her ambition (and minor horror at the course load sheâll likely face).
Then Sakura has to spend ridiculous amounts of time in government offices, going over last-minute student-visa information, finding out how she can legally get a job while sheâs there (she may be on scholarship, but itâs never too late to start saving for her medical program!) and then actually looking for work. It boggles the mind how many people look at her in amazement because she can actually speak English.
Why would I be going to an American college if I couldnât speak English?
Eventually she finds one of the big bookstores in the area is hiring, and itâs not the best job out there, but the hours are flexible and they tell her she can cut back or add depending on her schedule in the fall.
âMost of our employees are students,â the hiring manager tells her with a shrug, and a tone heavily implying a high turnover rate.
Another month goes by, and still Sakura canât get used to how strange it is not to be communicating with Sasuke. Whenever something new happens in the dorm room or she sees something he would think is amusing or interesting, she reaches for her new phone to text him about itâbut then forcibly stops herself. She knows if she does, itâs only a matter of time before she opens the floodgates to their unhealthy relationship once more.
ă”ăŻă©
Sheâs heading home from work one summer evening, when she becomes aware that she is being followed. Thereâs a half-dozen guys hanging outside one of the student-frequented pubs, drinking beer and whistling at girls who walk past.
âHey, sheâs one of the pretty ones!â
 âNee-HOW!â one of them calls at her, the sneer obviously meant to be endearing but making her want to hiss as she walks by.
The behaviour is juvenile, and makes Sakura roll her eyes, but she becomes a little wary when their inebriated jokes donât fade away. Two of the raucous young men have followed her.
âHey! Sweetheart! Come back with us, weâll buy you a drink!â
âYeah, we just wanna show you a good time!â
As she crosses one of the streets that short-cut to the campus, her gut sinks to find the road is empty.
âHey, donât be so stuck up,â someone says and she feels an unwelcome touch on her backside one moment, and then another someone is grabbing her bag. âCome on, take a break from studying!â
Sakuraâs body moves on its own, one hand snapping out and dragging the guy closest to her backward, shoving him onto his back. A combination of natural clumsiness, surprise and alcohol result in him falling flat on his back, and before he can recover she aims a kick to his groin area, then his face. Sheâs just winding up for the third blow, when his friend tackles her from behind, arms going around her.
Her elbow juts into his solar plexus, and he doubles over, gasping for air, she reaches over her shoulder, grasps his arm and bends into his body, living him over her shoulder and flipping him onto his back as well. She stomps down on the second guyâs gut enough to hobble him, and takes off before any of their friends show up.
Her heart beats in wild panic as she half-walks, half runs away, adrenaline and dismay warring for supremacy. Sheâs alrightâaside from a bruised fist when she hit against something that wasnât bone, sheâs uninjuredâbut the incident itself is shocking. Her entire frame shakes and she has the bizarre urge to cry, and her hands are already scrambling for her phone to call Sasuke.
She might even start dialling his phone number from memory, when she senses a presence behind her.
Whirling around, fist raised and knees bent to ward of any one else who might attack her, she instead finds herself face to face with a tall, blond guy her age.
âHeyâhey, relax, Iâm not going to hurt you!â he cries, hands up where she can see them and maintaining several feet of distance between them. âI came to see if youâre alright. I saw the whole thing from down the bloack, but couldnât get to you in time---not that I needed to, apparently. You did a great job on those dicks.â
Sakuraâs eyes dart around, just in case, but he appears genuine. There are more people around now as well, so if he tried anything, all sheâd have to do is scream.
âIf you want to file a report, Iâll back you up,â he goes on. âThose guys are scum.â
âIâŠâ she begins, and then swallows. âI donât know. I have toâŠâ
She has a sudden vision of her actions coming back to her, and having her scholarship revoked or something equally disturbing. Immediately after, a vision of those louts doing the same thing to another girlâone who doesnât have the ability to fight them off.
Sakura squares her shoulders. âYes. I have to report this.â
âIâll come with you. It happened on campus, so we have to go to the campus police,â he offers. When she hesitates, he points in the direction of the campus, âThat way. In full view of lights and security cameras and other people.â
âIâm sorry,â she says, âI donât mean to be rude, butââ
âAfter what just happened, youâre not being rude, youâre being smart,â he shakes his head. âEspecially considering it could have been a lot worse. Are you sure youâre alright?â
âIâmâŠfine,â she says, though she feels anything but fine.
Sheâs still shaking from the adrenaline, and he seems to notice, because he starts to talk. About everything and anything, completely random complaints about traffic in Boston to his roommates obsession of hockey to the clam chowder he had for lunch that day.
As they wander, she slowly volunteers a few things about herself, her brain gearing down from its sudden burst of quick thinking earlier. At some point she mentions calling her parents and then worrying about the time difference, because his expression brightens then.
âYouâre Japanese!â he declares, and then to her surprise, he switches to her native tongue. âSo, are you actually a student here, or just walking through our overpriced campus for the bragging rights?â
He has a bit of a weird accent, and he ends his sentences with dattebayo, but itâs endearing somehow.
âIâm a student here,â Sakura confirms. âAnd you speak Japanese very well.â
âI should. My parents moved to California from Tokyo when I was a kid. They spoke it enough around me that I picked it up, but Iâve never had anyone but them to practice with,â he grins. âYouâll help out, wonât youâŠ?â His eyes go comically wide. âOh, crap. I just realised, I forgot to introduce myselfâIâm Naruto Uzumaki.â
Sakura blinks. âThatâsâŠquite a name.â
âYeah, Iâve wondered about it for years. Either my parents were really stoned and hungry, or they chose the name out of the nearest book. What about you?â
âHaruno Sakura. Pleased to meet you.â
âLikewise!â Naruto beams. âI bet weâre going to get along great. Especially because, seeing what you can do, I promise I will never, ever mouth off to you, okay?â
This elicits a startled laugh from her, and a little of the weight from earlier lifts.
There ends up being no one in the office when they get there, meaning Sakura will have to wait until the next day to file her report, but Naruto promises to meet her there in the morning if she needs him.
âI might be half asleep when I get here, because I donât really do mornings, but Iâll totally be thereâbelieve it!â
Sheâs still not feeling entirely herself, though, and she lets him walk her to her dorm.
The minute she gets upstairs to her room, she has her phone in her hands and stares down at the screen, thumb hovering over the digits to try to decide who to call. Eventually, she decides thereâs no point to worrying anyone, not until sheâs filed the report. Her parents are too far away to do anything, and SasukeâŠ
Would he even care?
Immediately she feels a sick sense of guilt over that thought, because she knows that he would. Even if he doesnât love her romantically, they were (are?) friends and protective of one another, at least in some situations.
No. Telling him what happened canât be the first thing I say to him after not talking for so long. Ugh, why did this become so complicated?!
She throws herself back on her bed in frustration, trying to figure out where it all went wrong.
At some point, Ino returns to their room, toweling off damp hair. âSo, I noticed you didnât come back here alone.â
The comment is far from innocent.
âYeah, thatâs Naruto,â Sakura replies easily, ignoring the implication.
âHeâs cute. In a dopey, cinnamon roll puppy kind of way.â
âDonât do that, Ino.â
âDo what?â
âStart with the matchmaking,â Sakura retorts, throwing a pillow at her friend. âIâm not in the mood. Really not in the mood. We only just met, and besides, Iâm not ready for any kind of relationship.â
âWhy not? The best way to get over a broken heart is a rebound boy.â
âClearly youâve never actually had your heart broken, or you wouldnât say that,â Sakura retorts.
ă”ăŻă©
As it turns out, though, friendship with Naruto is instant and easy. Itâs almost seamless.
From the morning when he waits to meet her and helps file her report, providing a witness statement and grousing at the university employees for making them wait for results (which apparently theyâll be informed of by the deanâs office âat some pointâ), heâs another new fixture in her life.
They have a lot of things in common, from a guilty pleasure of watching WWE and the Princess Gale movie franchise, to spending entire afternoons at a fair and sampling as many different cuisines as possible. When sheâs not hanging out with Ino or the girls in her dorm, she spends her free time with Naruto, either out on the campus or in his dormâs common room. There always seems to be some kind of gathering or activity happening there, which she enjoys though she imagines it will make studying hard come fall.
Her new friend also has a tendency to get into scrapesâand drag her along with him.
He nearly burns down his dorm room with an illegal hot plate one day. Another evening they go for drinks at the local pub, and then drunk-challenge each other to see who can climb the largest tree on campus before security notices them. One night they chase someoneâs illegally kept cat through the quad and return him to the owner.
She nurses him through a spring cold that has him moaning and complaining and utterly useless, and plays video games with him on his console, though she doesnât let him win. They people watch, making up stories for strangers, and text memes to each other over Facebook. He shows up in the mornings with coffee and donuts for her, takes Inoâs attention off her when her friendâs overbearing and overprotective nature sometimes becomes more to bear and purposefully acts like a clown when he notices sheâs sad.
Which still happens, more than sheâd like.
Naruto is her rock, offering her support she didnât even realise she was missing, even before losing Sasuke.
And yetâŠ
Thereâs still a hole.
Some essential element is still missing.
Thereâs no chemistry between her and Naruto; no spark, no romance.
It frustrates her, because there should be. Heâs funny and kind, a little rough around the edges, but it makes life interesting. At the end of the day when she returns to her dorm, she always has a smile on her face, shaking her head at his most recent antics. He is what any girl would want, and just based on their relationship, it should be possible for them to fall into something more than friendship. She suspects he wants that, and thinking on Inoâs words, doesnât she deserve to try that?
I do, she tells herself. This is the something more I was looking for, right?
She resolves herself, deciding itâs all just a matter of effort. The age-old maxim âfake it until you make itâ could apply here.
And so she dresses up a little more, taking care in her appearance before they go out. She lets Naruto link their arms when they ramble through the campus, and when he insists on feeding her his favourite ramen âbecause itâs amazing, Sakura, believe it!â she lets him. She invites him to join her and Ino at karaoke, and they croon horribly off-key 80s power-ballads at each other. One day he surprises her by taking her roller-skating, which she hasnât done since before she met Sasuke. Itâs clichĂ© and cheesy, but she sort of loves it, in a different way than she loved geocaching or boat trips with Sasuke. She drags him to the museums in the area, trying to share her interests with him, and though she can tell itâs not his thing, heâs still enthusiastic for her sake. He offers her his hand as they stroll through the sculptures and oil paintings
And if his hand doesnât fit hers the right way, the way Sasukeâs did, well thatâs because heâs a different person. Sheâll get used to the way this feels.
And if she doesnât really miss Naruto when she doesnât seem him for a few days, then thatâs healthy, right? She goes an entire week without hearing from him beyond a few texts and images shared over Facebook, and she barely pauses in her plans with Ino.
But she still routinely checks her emails and texts for news from Sasuke and tries to ignore the scraping, clawing feeling in her chest and throat at the fact he doesnât even reach out to her anymore.
This is what I wanted, she tells herself, even as it rings hollow in her thoughts.
One night, a week before term officially begins, she and Naruto meet up on their way back to campus. They grab ice cream on the wayâeven though Naruto is lactose intolerant and always pays for his little indulgences violently the next dayâand wander through the courtyard. Eventually he steers them over to a bench where they finish their ice cream and then, thereâs a sudden silence between them.
Itâs uncharacteristic, because theyâre never really quiet together, and Sakura shifts nervously, unsure what to expect. When Naruto leans in, like heâs going to kiss her, and she is conscious sheâs supposed to lean in now, too.
Thatâs how it works. Your first kiss. Youâve dreamed about this.
But it feels wrong.
Thereâs a pit in her stomach that wonât go away and she feels like crying.
This isnât who sheâs supposed to be sharing it with.
Itâs not that she doesnât like Naruto, because she does. She cares deeply about him and he has quickly become one of her favourite people. He might even be as dear to her as Ino is.
However, the idea of kissing him doesnât bring her a thrill. Now that she thinks it through, having him put his arms around her makes her feel safe and comfortable and cared for, but thereâs no stimulus when they touch. No breathless feeling, no universe coming to a standstill, no electricity racing over her skin, and no sense of reaching out for a missing piece of herself.
And if that was meant to happen, shouldnât it have already?
Itâs been months of spending time together as friends and if it was meant to happen, shouldnât it have already? Is it fair to Naruto to keep trying if she doesnât feel for him?
Then again, I might not now, but maybe in the future?
ButâŠwhat if in the future she doesnât? And then they both have their hearts broken and she loses his friendship?
But what if I lose his friendship right now for rejecting him?
Heâll be gone and sheâll have that hole again.
ExceptâŠthe hole never really got filled to begin with, did it?
The questions and anxiety flit around her brain in an endless circle, freezing her like a statue as she desperately tries to sort all this out.
Naruto notices her pause, and pulls back.
âItâs not meant to be, is it?â he asks her, sounding sad.
âIâŠâ
âYouâre still hung up on that guy.â
âWaitâŠwhat?â
âIno told me about him. Sounds like a real bastard, honestly, but what can you do? I had hopedâŠbut I get it.â He shrugs and smiles, and despite a tinge of sadness, itâs still his usual open, wonderful smile.
A smile that doesnât belong to her.
Not in the way she expects. She sees that directed at everyone, because he is friendly with everyone and a good guy. Heâs kind and open and always trying to be everyoneâs friend, encourage them to do better, to call on him when they need someone. In a way, Naruto shares himself with everyone, and thatâs a great quality.
But thereâs a tiny, selfish part of Sakura that believes two people in love share something only amongst themselves.
When Sasuke used to smile at her, it was for her. When their eyes met, there was always a shared moment, just between the two of them, like they had a secret no one else could ever know. And that was with him spectacularly ignorant toward her feelings; her heart still flutters at the idea of him loving her like she loves him.
Oh.
âLovesâ.
Iâm still in love with him, she realises. ButâŠitâs been months. The more time passes, the less I shouldâŠ
The urge to cry increased, but she doesnât know if itâs more in sadness of frustration with the whole situation.
Iâm a horrible person. Here we are, Iâve just rejected him, and all I can think about is Sasuke. What the hell is wrong with me?
âI understand if you donât get it, or if you donât want to be friends anymore,â she mumbles, looking down at her feet.
âOf course I still want to be friends,â Naruto says, puzzled. âIt sucks, yeah, but it would have been worse if you didnât say anything. Besides. I sort of get it.â
âR-really?â
âWell, not the being hung up on another guy thing. From what Ino said, he sounds like a clueless moron,â Naruto disdains, and Sakura snorts in bitter laughter because she canât argue. âBut feeling like you really connect to a person in a way you canât with anyone else? I get that.â
Sakura cocks her head to one side, curious.
âIâll tell you about it another time,â he tells her. âThe point is, you canât help who you have chemistry with. I just hope that, if you canât find it with me, and if you didnât find it with him, one day you find it with someone. Anyone.â
Sakura sighs. âI donât think itâs that easyâŠâ
ă€ă„ă
If the progression of Naruto and Sakuraâs relationship seems fast, itâs intentional. This happens over a period of months and remember, this story is based on Sakura and Sasukeâs relationship. This chapter is just to take a look at what theyâre doing while theyâre missing each other and unable to find that âother halfâ feeling with other people. We may just get to see a reunion next chapter, depending on where my editing muse chooses to take meâŠ
æ
Next Chapter
#ssm17#ssm17d3#sasusaku#narutofanfiction#au#college au#uchiha sasuke#haruno sakura#itachi uchiha#ino yamanaka#shisui uchiha#naruto uzumaki#drama#angst#friendship#sasusakumonth#chemistry#misunderstandings#missing piece
179 notes
·
View notes