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Okay so like, imagine hearing that Wilbur is insecure about the way he looks (totally valid btw) and just taking him somewhere to sit down. Holding his hands and sitting on your knees in front of him, looking up at him softly.
You kiss his palms, every action full of gentleness, then his knuckles. And you sit there for hours, softly pointing out every little thing you love about him and pressing your lips to it.
âYou see this right here?â you point to the dimple on the left side of his face and kiss it, âThe cutest thing ever.â
âYour arms, look at these! So strong, so pretty.â
âOh my gosh and your hands, Wil! Look! Theyâre gorgeous and so talented, you can play guitar better than anyone Iâve ever known.â
Every comment is laced with giddy love, adoration, worship. There is no lust, just pure unconditional love.
And by the end, he's pulling you into his lap and kissing you gently, whispering thank yous and smiling so big.
Sweet sweet boy :(
#mosslovestherain#moss writes#wilbur soot#wilbur soot x reader#wilbur soot x you#wilbur soot fluff#wilbur x reader#wilbur x you#insecurity#soft gentle love#fluffy fluff fluff
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we are a lighthouse
Summary: A late night with the bad kids where they finally unpack some things that have been weighing them down.
A/N: this started as a drabble where the kids cuddle and evolved into... this! Hope you enjoy!
https://archiveofourown.org/works/57798592
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Itâs been a long night. Well, it was a long day, and a long night on top of it. The Bad Kids stumble together into Mordred Manor at almost three in the morning, as tangled up in each other as they always are. Riz is curled around Gorgugâs shoulders, mumbling all of the clues he has yet to write down so that he doesnât forget them. Fig and Fabian are leaning on each other heavily, the Infaethable Bass and Fandrangor clanging noisily against each other as they talk through the highlights of the fight. Adaine is on Kristenâs back, the latter still casting the last of her healing spells to help them all be a little more comfortable. They donât discuss sleeping arrangements, and no one bothers to try to separate. Adaine summons air mephits to carry various blankets and pillows down from her tower, while Fig dimension doors to her room and right back. As the boys start to arrange everything, Kristen goes into the kitchen to grab an armload of water bottles for everyone and some ibuprofen out of the medicine cabinet.
There are several moments of shuffling around, everyone helping to finish their makeshift bed and getting comfortable. Fabian collapses into it first with a dramatic flourish and a low, tired groan.
âI never want to move again,â he complains, only for Riz and Adaine to immediately force him to adjust as they lie down as well. Riz curls into a ball (ha) on his left facing away from Fabian and in towards the group, tail snaking out to wrap around his leg. Adaine is on Rizâs other side, curling around him until she can rest her head on Fabianâs chest. She grumbles a complaint as he shifts onto his side to face them instead, letting her head rest on his arm and tangling his right hand into Rizâs hair.
Gorgug is the next to go down, reaching over to grab Fabianâs free hand from behind Adaine but ultimately leaving plenty of space for the final two party members to climb in between them. Fig makes good use of the space by sprawling almost sideways across Gorgug, her legs tangling with Adaineâs despite the space between them. Kristen joins the knot of girls in the middle after only a few more seconds, laying sideways like Fig and resting her head on Gorgugâs stomach. Figâs arm slides around her waist, and Fabian groans slightly at the feeling of her accidental kicking.
âKristen, if your cold as fuck feet touch me again Iâm cutting them off,â he murmurs, and Fig giggles into her shoulder. Riz shushes him.
âStop complaining, she got Ray of Frost-ed earlier, you can suffer.â he grumbles, and now Gorgug is laughing too, then Adaine as Fabian lets out an affronted noise. He mutters one more complaint, then Kristen giggles as she kicks him gently again. He shoots her a glare before everyone finally settles; theyâre silent, but no one is asleep. There are several long seconds like that. Thenâ
âSo, what did you guys see in the forest?â Fig asks, voice as sure as it always is but softer than theyâve ever heard it. Itâs a tone she reserves for them, her parents, and, more recently, Ayda Aguefort. It comes in at the moments they need it most, usually alongside a bardic inspiration to lift them out of their lowest points. Adaine hears it in the middle of her panic attacks, while Fabian remembers hearing it that night on Leviathan.
It makes sense, of course, that they would have to talk about the Nightmare forest eventually. It even makes sense that Fig would be the one to decide it was time to do so, always unable to keep herself from addressing the elephant in the room.
Whatâs surprising is that Fabian answers first.
âChungledown Bim said he was going to shit in my mouth, and the sexy rat from freshman year was chasing me. Cassandra said Chungledown was just actually there, which really fucks me up.â he admits, and there another moment of silence.
âHeâs never going to touch you,â Riz says the words with such absolute conviction they canât be anything but true.
Adaineâs eyes, against all odds, flash blue-white. The air grows tense for a few seconds as she arches upward, then Gorgug catches her head as she falls back again. âMini-prophecy. Heâll never touch you again, Fabian.â she says confidently, and the whole room lets out a sigh of relief. Thereâs a slight lull before she continues. âI saw this weird phantasmagorical circus nightmare. Biz from the AV club was there, and he had me in an⌠orb, like what I was in in Fallinel, or maybe it was more like a palimpsest. I just kept leaning into the fear until I found my parents. The rest of it you guys already know.â
Kristen frowns. âGod he was so shitty. Congrats on killing your dad, though, I donât know if I ever told you that.â
âThanks,â Adaine says as soft chuckles echo throughout the group at Kristenâs words. Fabian, possible the only one in the group who can understand the complex emotions that come with killing your own parent, pulls his hand away from Gorgugâs to gently run it through Adaineâs hair. Heâs not usually much of a physical affection type of person, but itâs something Cathilda does for him when heâs sick or upset. She leans into it with a small, soft smile.
Gorgug is the next to speak up, voice as gentle and steadfast as always. âI went up against a sphinx that told me how stupid I am, then a tunnel that kept getting smaller and smaller until I got stuck for a while. Iâm not even sure how I got out, I just⌠I just kept going.â he says, and as he says those final two words, an echo of the private sentiment that never quite reached his friendsâ ears, a soft blanket of magic settles over the group. Those who are sensitive to it shiver, Figâs tail flicking as her eyes zero in on Gorgug.
âGorgug, did you just use magic?â she asks, and his eyebrow furrow in confusion, reluctantly propping himself up on his elbows.
âNo, I donât think so,â he says.
Fabian sits up as well, a spark of something in his eyes. âNo, Iâve felt that before. In the forest. I thought all hope was lost, but then I had this moment where it was like I just knew everything was going to be okay again.â
Everyone starts talking over each other at once, sharing similar moments from their time in the forest. It happened five times for each of them, and that makes for easy math. Since Gorgug is the only lead they have, they start there. It takes minimal prodding before Gorgug bashfully shares his theory.
âI thought, just maybe, that some of us might end up crossing over the same paths if we were all headed to the center of the forest. When I made it to the other side of the tunnel, I felt really scared and alone. I didnât want any of you guys to feel that way, so I used a trick my parents taught me to record an enchanted message on a rock so that you would know you were going in the right direction,â he explains softly.
Adaine carefully clears her throat before speaking. âWhat was the message?â
âItâs Gorgug, keep going.â
The magic that settles over them is stronger this time, rejuvenating and relaxing them all at the same time. Everyone settles back into their same positions as before, muscles relaxing despite the strain from the intense fight earlier in the day. Itâs silent for a long stretch, but they all know the conversation isnât over. Fig and Riz are just waiting each other out.
To everyoneâs surprise, Riz breaks first. âI know what I did in the forest, just running away without warning, wasnât fair to you guys. It was just the scariest thing I could think of, just rushing in without a plan or backup, so I thought it would help me find Kristen. After that, I saw Baron, the creepy skeleton boy who kidnapped me and claimed to be my romance partner.â He sighs quietly, âHe forced me to come to terms with something that Iâve been meaning to tell you guys for a while; Iâm aromantic. Iâm not getting my kisses in because I donât care about kisses, and I donât want to date anyone.â
Thereâs a split second where everyone is still processing the information beforeâ âRIZ!â Kristen sits bolt upright and yanks him into a hug that rivals the strength of Raghâs bear hugs. âIâm so glad youâre officially queer, you so have to join the GSA with me and Ragh! Itâs really great, and we have other a-spec people in there too! And other people who are still new to the community, so it wonât be too overwhelming or anything,â she rambles.
Riz laughs softly, hugging her back as the other bad kids also get up to hug the two of them. It lasts several long moments before they all resettle, a mess of squirming limbs and too-sharp elbows in all the wrong places. For how graceful most of them seem while in combat, they all sink to Kristenâs level of dexterity in softer moments like these, enjoying the playfulness that comes along with it.
Fig buries her head in the crook of Kristenâs neck, holding her tighter than before. Grogug brings his spare hand down to rest a heavy hand on the back of her hair, gently carding his fingers through the mess that is her post-battle unbrushed hair. He pulls some remaining bits of rubble from it, and he sees the moment Adaine casts prestidigitation to clean them both up.
âIâm scared,â Fig starts softly, tone so fragile it feels like she could shatter at any moment. Kristen wraps her arms more securely around her waist. âIâm scared that if I tell you guys what I was really thinking about in that moment, youâll hate me.â
âWe could never hate you,â Riz responds immediately.
âYouâre our best friend, and weâve seen you at your best and your worst. Weâre not going to think any less of you for what was on your mind at one of the scariest moments in all of our lives,â Adaine assures her.
Kristen nudges Figâs horns with her own forehead until the other girl looks up at her. âIf you donât want to share, you donât have to. Iâll still love you no matter what you say, though.â
It takes Fig several more long moments to finally speak again. âI was so focused on how much of a fuck up I had been the whole adventure. I kept thinking about the horrible things I did to my dad and to Riz, and how my whole mess with Hell had messed with our timeline. I felt like an imposter, like I didnât deserve to be around you guys. I saw another version of me, and it was like I disappeared and she replaced me, except she was actually cool. She knew exactly what to do, she was helpful, she seemed like she had a plan immediately. Sheâs the version of myself Iâve always projected out to others and sheâs a lie.â she says.
Kristen nods slowly, giving Fig a small smile. âI think youâre awesome just the way you are. Youâre one of the nicest, coolest people Iâve ever known,â she says sincerely.
Gorgug nods in agreement. âWithout you, I never would have been able to figure out how to be an artificer and a barbarian. It really came down to that moment where you encouraged me to pick up drumming. When you saw me having a hard time, you went out of your way to talk to me and help me even though you didnât have to.â
âOn the first day of school, before you even knew my name, you saw me having a panic attack and tried to take the fall for a stupid thing I did to get me out of trouble. It was the coolest thing Iâd ever seen anyone do, and the kindest anyone had ever been to me at that point in my life,â Adaine admits softly, and FIg feels her heart grow warm as her friends reassure her. The final traces of the magic from earlier remains as just a gentle tingling on their skin, and after a few beats Kristen starts giggling.
âWe get to tell Aguefort he was wrong,â she points out, much to everyone else's confusion. âHe thinks chronomancy is the greatest magic of all and one time he told me that love isnât magic. We just proved that it can be.â
#dimension 20#d20#fantasy high#moss speaks#fhjy spoilers#dimension 20 spoilers#d20 fantasy high#brennan lee mulligan#kristen applebees#fhjy#figeroth faeth#fig faeth#fig fantasy high#saint kristen applebees#kristen fantasy high#fabian fantasy high#fabian aramais seacaster#fabian seacaster#riz gukgak#riz fantasy high#adaine#adaine abernant#adaine o'shaughnessey#adaine fantasy high#gorgug#gorgug fantasy high#gorgug thistlespring#the bad kids#moss writes#d20 fhjy
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Hihihibi I wrote something
a pilot and her mech have been on the front, fighting for weeks without break, battle after battle. she fights for her life, rain pattering against the cockpit window as flak and shells whiz by, alarms blaring in her ears as her lungs burn from the stress, struggling to take in the recycled air her mech feeds her. suddenly, a shell impacts, grazes the top of the cockpit. alarms blare as she advances. another shell, chest impact. then another, right shoulder. a third, right to the top of the cockpit, ripping the hatch off, exposing it to open air. as the battle winds down, they stand in the field. she rips her respirator off, tossing it out of the cockpit. it's almost cathartic, feeling the wind on her face, the cool rain on her sweat-soaked skin. she just.. stands there in her cockpit, feeling the rain fall, listening to the hiss it makes as it lands on her overheating mech, evaporating almost instantly. the rain is cold. is this what rain feels like? it's nice.
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superposition â miyuki kazuya in which miyuki isn't the fool in love with his childhood best friend. it's you.
â completed
â wc: 27k
â warnings: none
â you can read this on ao3 as well
You met Miyuki Kazuya when you were eight-years-old. You didnât know how to feel about him.
You were introduced to him simply because he was the same age as you and you happened to live a few houses down from each other. It had been an attempt to get you to socialize more, as the move from your home country had severely jarred you. Here you were, in an entirely different city and country with strange new customs and environments. The small, eight-year-old you didnât like it very much.
The move had all been done in favor of the bakery your parents ran, recipes based on traditional dishes you grew up with. The bakery was right next door to your home and always seemed to be busy. Your father was almost always there, running around, making sure customers were happy while your mother played the entertainer.
They mustâve gotten tired of having to split their attention between you and the bakery because that morning before the bakery opened, she dragged you into the yard, where a short boy with brown hair and glasses waited.
âThis Miyuki Kazuya. He lives down the street with his father. Go on, say hello,â your mother tried to coax you out from behind her legs, but you stayed there stubbornly, the fabric of her skirt balled up in your small hands. Your strength was no match against hers, though, and she pried you off her skirt, leaving the two of you in the yard of your house alone.
The boy peered cautiously at you. You realized he was smaller than you and relaxed slightly. Smaller kids were easier to deal with, right?
âDo you know how to play baseball?â he asked suddenly, watching with wide, amber eyes.
You pursed your lips. âNot really. Itâs hard.â
Miyuki blinked in surprise. âHard? No, itâs not.â
âYes, it is,â you countered stubbornly.
âNo, itâs not.â
âYes, it is!â
âCan you throw a ball?â
You stopped, confused at the sudden question. âOf course I can,â you huffed, now affronted. What kind of question was that? Who didnât know how to throw a ball?
âThen you can play. Come on, letâs go. I left my glove at my house.â He turned and began walking down the street, not bothering to wait for you.
He was annoying, you thought, but you were a little curious, so you followed him down the sidewalk to a two-story home a few houses down from yours, right next door to a factory.
âWait here,â he instructed then dashed into the house, giving you no time to protest. You pouted, crossing your arms over your chest. Who was this boy? He was so demanding and know-it-all. And you barely knew him, who was he to tell you what to do?
While you were tempted to not listen to him, you stayed there, waiting impatiently for him to return. You glanced around. The factory next door had the sounds of work going on, but you couldnât see anything and the windows were far too high for you to see. You squinted to read the sign. Miyuki Steel. Did his family own a business, too?
You looked back to the door as he dashed out of the house, baseball glove and ball in hand. He held up a hand, signaling for you to wait as he ran to the factory and popped his head into the doorway.
âIâll be home in a little while, Dad!â
There was no audible response, but he turned back around anyway, walking back towards you. He tossed you the ball, which you clumsily caught with a scowl on your face.
âDoes your family own a business, too?â
âMy dad,â he corrected. âHe makes machines. Itâs cool.â
That was kinda cool, but you didnât want to give him the satisfaction of knowing you agreed.
âAre you gonna work there, too? When youâre grown-up?â
âNo way. Iâm gonna be a professional baseball player.â He turned to grin arrogantly at you. âHey, hurry up. We need to get a good spot at the park.â
âDonât tell me what to do,â you muttered, mood souring quickly at his bossiness.
Miyuki shrugged. âThatâs what catchers do for their pitchers.â
âIâm not a pitcher,â you protested, following him reluctantly across the street after you glanced both directions, something heâd totally failed to do before crossing. âI wanna be a doctor.â
âThatâs boring.â
You scowled, stopping on the sidewalk and dropping the ball unceremoniously onto the ground. âI donât want to play, then.â
âFine, then.â He continued walking towards the park, barely sparing you a glance.
You stood there for a second, casting a glance at the baseball still resting at your feet, then at your house that was quite a ways back. Squinting, you could see the bakery right next to it, the door swinging open and closed as people entered in quick succession. You recalled your motherâs words before Miyuki came over.
âHoney, please . . . Try to make some friends, okay? Kazuya is a good kid. Heâll grow on you.â
Initially, youâd been confused. Shouldnât she have said something like âyouâll like himâ instead of that? But now, you understood. He was infuriating.
Yet, you remembered the loneliness of the first few days, stuck inside the house with nothing to do. Your older sister was always in her room, not willing to play with you. Apparently, sheâd outgrown you, which didnât make much sense. Sisters were always there, werenât they?
Then, there was the situation with your parents and the bakery. On top of that, they were also preoccupied with your motherâs pregnancy. Rather, your father was constantly worrying about her, even though she was only six months pregnant. The baby only came when she was nine months pregnant, so why was he so worried about it?
You frowned, staring at the red stitching on the baseball. Miyukiâs bossiness . . . Well, it could be something you worked on, right?
You picked up the ball and ran after him.
âWait up!â
You decided that he may not be the ideal friend, but he was there, and that was all that mattered.
Your younger brother was born two months later in the winter of December on a particularly cold day. By then, Miyuki had stuck to your side like a parasite, always asking for you to pitch to him, always asking for you to help him out if he ever got scraped up. And you did it, not necessarily because he was being annoying about it â which he was, but you were beginning to grow immune to his pestering â but because it was fun.
(Well. Disinfecting bloody knees wasnât fun, but the cringe youâd get out of him when you poured hydrogen peroxide over the cut was always satisfying. Served him right for running around like an idiot.)
For your little brotherâs one-month anniversary, friends and family were invited over. Aunts and uncles preened over you (âYouâre growing up so fast!â and âYou look exactly like your mother!â). It was horrible, so you managed to sneak Miyuki in and made a getaway to your room to play video games.
As you walked down the hallway, his attention was grabbed by your little brother currently napping in his nursery. (You didnât understand why the party still went on even while he was asleep. This was all for him, wasnât it?)
âHeâs not that cute,â Miyuki muttered as he looked over the bars of the crib.
You nodded somberly. âHe isnât. He looks like a wrinkled grape. Mom said thatâs just how little babies look, though.â
âSo, you looked like that at one point, then.â
You scoffed. âSo did you.â
âOf course I didnât. I was a cute baby.â
âSure.â
He reached out to tug on a piece of your hair and you batted his hand away with a scowl. âI wonât pitch for you anymore,â you said warningly.
âFine, fine,â Miyuki snickered. âCome on. I wanna play Mario Kart today.â
You two snuck out of the nursery and into your room to play games for the rest of day, at least until he had to go home. Or until your mother discovered him.
Your name is called, just as your mother opens the door, in the middle of saying, ââ come downstairs weâre all going to have din â"
She stops, blinking in surprise at the sight of Miyuki on the floor. âHello, Kazuya.â
He stood up quickly and bowed.
She smiled, but it looked strange. âWould you like to join us for dinner? Perhaps you want to invite your father as well? Oh, does he know youâre here?â
Miyuki nodded but didnât say much after that. You took over.
âHeâll stay. You should invite your dad, too. If heâs not working.â Both of you knew the answer to that, but your mother was still watching you two interact, a curious look in her eyes.
âWell, you know where the house phone is. Come down in a few minutes, alright?â
âYes, maâam.â
She shut the door. You look down at him. âWorking?â
He nodded. âAll day.â
You shrugged, pulling yourself off your bed. âThatâs okay. You can be with us.â
âLetâs play catch afterward.â
You rolled your eyes as you two exited the room. When you passed your brotherâs room, the crib was empty. You could hear your family members cooing downstairs and figured he mustâve woken up.
âThought you wanted to play Mario Kart?â you huffed as you walked down the stairs.
âI changed my mind.â
âYouâre so annoying.â
âThanks.â
âItâs not a compliment.â
For the last few years of elementary school and your first year of junior high, you two were joined at the hip. Junior high also meant that Miyuki was getting serious about baseball. Heâd received his first catcherâs glove from his father for his birthday that year. Not that using the one from the school hindered his performance anyway.
Being on the team meant he constantly got into fights with the older boys, so you slowly transitioned from cleaning up scrapes he received from rolling around to bandaging and icing bruises he received from fights.
Youâd been making your way to the baseball field to catch Miyuki. Youâd already heard of his loss from the other students part of the medical club and worried about his well-being, but when he dashed up the hill, he was grinning widely. Your eyes immediately went to the cut on his face.
âWhereâd you get that?â You asked, gaping as he ran up to you, baseball gear over his shoulder.
âNever mind that. I canât believe you missed todayâs game. It was so good.â
âMiyuki, didnât you guys lose?â
âYes, but thatâs not the point. Their catcher outplayed me!â
You surveyed him carefully. âDid you get a concussion?â
âWhat â No, Iâm fine,â he shook his head, his cap moving precariously with his rapid movements. âYouâre not listening to me right now. He was some foreigner, I heard his dad was in the Majors here after coming from America.â
âAnd this is good because . . . ?â you trailed off, confusion clear in your voice.
Miyukiâs grin turned competitive. âI finally have a challenger.â
You scrutinized him for a few more seconds, long enough for his grin to fade and for him to fidget under your gaze. Finally, you clicked your tongue in disapproval. âIs everything a challenge to you?â
âHow else am I supposed to be the best?â
You scowled. âMaybe not get hurt? Also, how did you get that cut? Are you the boys beating you up again? They better not be.â
âI tripped and fell on my way up here.â As usual, he looked utterly unashamed. You had to wonder: did this boy even feel shame? You pinched the bridge of your nose, turning on your heel, setting off for the school.
âDummy. Come on, letâs go.â You didnât wait for him, knowing heâd keep up with you without any protests.
âThose fights were never my fault, either,â he disagreed. âAge doesnât matter on the field and I was just saying it like it is.â
You rolled your eyes, though you agreed. Youâd never been fond of the way his older teammates pushed him around; even if Miyuki could be painfully blunt sometimes, you didnât think there was any reason to get violent with him. And even then, sometimes he didn't even need to say anything for them to get pissed off.
You really didn't like his teammates.
He never fought back, either; said everything should be resolved on the field. You agreed, but the other boys would never think like that. Theyâd only continue to beat him up because they felt insecure, or he said something about their performance â something that was probably true. He could be brutal but he wasn't cruel.
âAlso,â he continued as you two reentered the school and walked to your locker where you held a first aid kit (specifically put there because of Miyuki), âthere was a scout there today, from Seido High School.â
You unlocked the locker, rummaging through it for the kit. âAnd?â
He told you about his encounter (you snorted when he recalled her comment about his height) with her and when he was finished, leaning against the locker as you tended to his cut, he looked thoughtful.
âYou think heâd go to Seido?â
âWhoâs this kid again? Do you have a crush?â
Miyuki puffed out his cheeks, glaring slightly at you. âNo way. Heâs my competition. I canât like the enemy that way!â
You laughed, reveling in this brief moment where you were the one annoying him. âAlright, alright. I donât know, Miyuki. Seidoâs a good school, I think, especially if you wanna get serious about baseball.â
âShould I go?â
You pressed the gauze to his cheek, shooting him an apologetic look after he winced from the pressure. After, you began cleaning up and putting the kit away again. He was awaiting your answer still, watching you with analytic eyes. You shrugged.
âItâs up to you. Seidoâs a powerhouse school, so I think youâd be fine, especially since youâre so damn competitive. I just thought you meant youâd challenge him from another school, assuming he went to Seido,â you told him honestly. âBut also, weâre barely first years.â
He nodded, but he still looked thoughtful. Too thoughtful.
You shut your locker and shoved him forward, making him stumble on his feet.
âHey, what was that for?â he yelped indignantly, catching his balance and readjusting the bag on his shoulder.
âYouâre thinking too hard,â you replied. âHurry up. You need to shower because you stink and my mom wants to try out a recipe with you.â
âYouâre picking up too many of my habits,â he said, mock-disapprovingly, as you put on your backpack again and fell in step beside him.
âIs Miyuki Kazuya admitting he has flaws?â
âNever mind. I donât know what youâre talking about.â
In your second year of junior high, your brother turned four-years-old. You also finally hit fourteen, along with Miyuki. With that, many changes came. Odd changes. Body changes. You wouldnât lie. It was weird.
The counselors seemed to notice the sudden plight you all had. Girls stuck closer to each other, gossiping about boys and the like. Boys were suddenly coming in wearing heavy cologne, trying their hardest to appeal to others. You thought it was stupid. So did Miyuki.
That didnât mean you two were exempt from the mandatory conversation with the counselor about the âchanges in your bodyâ and the âstrange way you may be feeling,â whatever that meant. Truth be told, it was almost scarring.
âTell me, have you noticed a change in your feelings to other boys? Perhaps even girls?â
You blinked demurely. âNot really.â
The counselor wasnât satisfied, her lips turning down for a split second before she fixed into a proper smile. âNo to the girls?â
âNo to both of them,â you corrected politely. âI donât really notice or care about those sort of feelings. Theyâre not necessary.â
âNot . . . necessary?â She asked, confusion as clear as day on her face.
You shrugged. âThatâs what my older sister says.â Your elder sister had graduated high school last year and stayed home to help out with the family business, apparently finding some happiness in the kitchen baking pastries. You werenât so keen on staying here, at least not in this part of Tokyo.
Your mother and father would probably have you stay back happily, too. As your third and final year of junior high grew closer, teachers and parents were suddenly awaiting your decision on a high school. You wished theyâd just leave you alone.
âAlright,â she conceded warily. âBut what do you think?â
What did you think? Now, that was the million-dollar question.
You shrugged again. The counselor was beginning to look annoyed.
âWell, regardless of that, you should know that some of the . . . urges you may get arenât things you need to act on.â . . . Wait, what?
You stared at her. âUh . . .â
âIâm sure you know what sex is ââ
You blanched. âSensei!â That was what this was about? No, you already knew about that, probably too much. The other girls in your grade hadnât hesitated on divulging private details about their close encounters with other boys and it was far too much information you ever wanted to know about anybody else. You didnât judge on what they were doing, thatâs not it, itâs just â too much information.
âI already know about that stuff,â you hurried out, feeling your face begin to heat up. âA-And I know I shouldnât do any of that until Iâm older. I know.â
She scrutinized you and you wondered if this was what Miyuki felt like whenever you gave him that look. If so, you were going to stop. It felt like she was seeing right through you.
Finally, she sighed and nodded. âYou have a good head on your shoulders, so, I trust youâll know what to do if youâre ever faced with something like that. Remember, though, you can always say no to unwanted advances, alright?â
You nodded firmly, finding familiar ground. Yeah, your father had given you that particular talk, too.
âGirl or boy, you always ask consent and they should, too. Donât be afraid to say no and donât be afraid to get out of there if they donât agree.â You werenât a pushover. Hell, you couldnât be one if you had to deal with someone like Miyuki. But even he seemed more aware of the kids that were suddenly looking at you with renewed interest.
âThey ought to keep their eyes to themselves,â heâd muttered, stepping around to your other side to block you from the wandering eyes of a group of third years.
You only sighed, burying your nose deeper into the book on medicine youâd been obsessed with at the time. Oh, you could definitely take care of yourself and if need be, fight for yourself, too, but if Miyuki was willing to be your defender for now, who were you to deny him? It wasnât like you doubted your ability to defend yourself. But he was already there and you werenât going to waste that opportunity. Basic strategy in your opinion.
âAlright, then, weâre done here. Send Kazuya in, wonât you?â
You nodded and scrambled out of your seat, desperate to get out of that situation. Your face still felt irritatingly hot but you ignored it. You exited the office, spotting Miyuki in the waiting area, a sports magazine in his lap.
âYouâre up, Miyuki,â you said, stealing the magazine off his lap, much to his chagrin.
âHey, I was reading that ââ he made a grab for it but you stretched your arm behind you, holding it at a distance. He stood up and you were momentarily surprised, stunned if you were being honest. So surprised you let him pry the magazine out of your hands.
âThereâs a good article in here about the catcher that the SoftBank Hawks just recruited, I want to take a picture of it. You have your phone?â He held out his hand expectantly and you had the briefest of common sense to hand your phone over to him. His fingers brushed against yours and you pulled back, as though youâd been electrocuted. He didnât notice.
You stared at him. When . . . When had he gotten so tall? Only last year heâd been the about the same height as you, if only a few inches taller, but it hadnât been noticeable. When youâd been kids, youâd always been the one taller than him, but you kept growing and seemed to have stopped now.
Miyuki, though . . . He was easily five to six inches taller than you. What would that be? Five foot nine? Maybe even five foot ten? When had this happened? Was this recent? Or had it been gradual and you just hadnât noticed?
âIâm gonna need to use your phone later to read this. Thanks. Hey, what does she want, by the way?â Heâd handed you your phone back without glancing back and set the magazine back down on the coffee table, but once heâd turned around, he stopped and frowned at you, saying your name. âYou good?â
You snapped out of it. âIâm fine, sorry. Just got distracted.â
âWith what?â Of course. Miyuki Kazuya never knew when to drop something. He eyed you with barely-hidden suspicion.
âItâs nothing. Have you gotten taller recently?â Curse your loose tongue. You couldnât help it, though. You had to know.
âHave I . . . ? Oh. Yeah,â he grinned, looking smug now, but there was something different because now you had to look up at him. It felt weird. Strange. âFive foot nine and half, last time I checked. Had to donate almost all of my pants. What about you?â
You scowled, your strange feelings disappearing as quickly as theyâd come. âShut it. Hurry up before Otsuka-sensei comes out here and beats you up.â
His obnoxious laughter followed you out of the main office. âShe wouldnât! Iâll see you in class, donât eat lunch without me!â
You paused to look back at him. âWhat if you take too long?â
He grinned in a way that irritated you. âGuess youâre not eating lunch!â
You scowled deeply, swallowing down the curse words you felt compelled to throw at him, only holding back because of the receptionist currently eyeing you two in disapproval.
Prick, you mouthed.
He winked. Bastard.
Saying others didnât have high expectations of you would be a lie. You were one of the top students in your grade, well-known for taking excellent notes and passing all your exams. Of course, others merely assumed you were just naturally intelligent, but it didnât work that way.
There were far too many times when you had to split time between working register at the bakery and studying for a test. And many more times when you had to turn Miyuki down for some time to yourself. Honestly, though, you were sure youâd have run yourself into the ground if it hadnât been for Miyukiâs pestering sometimes.
âI need to study, Miyuki,â you grumbled, switching between reading your textbook and taking inventory behind the counter. He was leaning over it, glove and baseball in his hand with his hat worn crookedly as per usual.
âYouâve been studying for the past three days. A break wonât kill you.â
âIt might.â
He huffed petulantly. âYouâre ignoring your best friend in favor of school? How cruel.â
You sighed shortly. âDonât pull that.â
âNo, no, itâs fine. Iâm sure your little brother would be more than happy to pitch to me ââ
âYou realize he has the arm strength of a toddler, right?â
âOr maybe Mei would be willing to do it. He has been begging me to catch for him recently . . .â
âNarumiya . . .â you grumbled out, mood souring further. Narumiya Mei was from downtown Tokyo, living it up in the more expensive districts at his junior high where he dominated as the ace. Apparently, Miyuki and Narumiya had gone head-to-head during a game in the first semester of your second year and Narumiya liked Miyukiâs style of catching, even though your junior highâs team had lost phenomenally.
âIâm sure he wonât mind taking the train here . . .â
You clicked your tongue, flipping to the next page of your textbook. âMiyuki, you and I both know you canât handle him for long periods of time. Itâs literally impossible.â
He cracked a genuine smile. âGive him more credit.â
âNo,â you refused stubbornly. Narumiya could be so condescending sometimes. The first time youâd met him, he hadnât hesitated to throw an insult at you and worse, Miyuki hadnât felt the need to defend you from it. That had been your first serious fight.
âYes, Miyuki, I can defend myself, but I hardly knew him. Why couldnât you step up for me? Just that once?â
âYouâre making this a bigger deal than it actually is.â
âWeâre friends, arenât we? Friends defend each other, especially best friends, so what the hell?â
âIf thatâs all youâre going to talk about, I really donât want to play with you, then.â
You had thick skin. You had to, being friends with Miyuki and all. And okay, fine, you were hurt when he had dismissed you so easily. Sure, maybe you were making this a bigger deal than it shouldâve been, but nothing had quite hurt as much as it had when you learned that heâd went to catch for Narumiya after you had abandoned him. (Or rather after heâd abandoned you.)
Your older sister had been pissed to find you sniffling about it later on that day, vowing to kick his ass. You only barely managed to restrain her. Miyuki wouldnât like someone else coming to speak or fight on your behalf. You both were mature enough to discuss it. Or so you hoped, anyway.
One week of no contact between you two had you almost caving and giving into him, but to your pleasant surprise, he approached you first. More specifically, heâd taken the painstaking time to jump the fence into your backyard and toss pebbles at your window until you finally opened it, almost taking a well-aimed pebble to the face in the process.
Of course, he didnât outright apologize. Instead, heâd asked: âCan we play catch?â
âItâs two in the morning.â
âIt is,â he agreed, then held up his glove and ball. âPlease?â
Youâd sighed, turning back into your room to change out of your sleeping clothes into something more suitable for going out in the muggy July night. It was easy to sneak out, your parents and siblings all fast sleep and immune to any quiet noises you mightâve made on the way out. Miyuki was waiting for you on the sidewalk in front of your house when you exited; you shut and locked the door quietly behind you.
Silently, you two began the trek to the park down the street. You found yourself tensing whenever a car would pass, ducking your head to hide your face. When the third one came round, you finally spoke. âWhat exactly am I breaking curfew for, Miyuki? My parents would kill me if we got taken home by a police officer.â
You lifted your head once the car was out of sight and turned to look at him. He had a pensive frown on his face. âI . . . Iâm sorry.â He didnât make eye contact with you. (In the present day, you distantly wondered if heâd been taller than you at the time, too. He had, but only by a few inches, not as tall as heâd been during the talk with the counselor.)
You were speechless. Miyuki Kazuya didnât . . . apologize. Quite honestly, you were beginning to think you had made a bigger deal out of it than necessary. But perhaps that had been a trick on your own part, anything to try and talk with Miyuki like normal again. Up until now, you two had been close, though baseball was starting to take up a lot of his time and the medical club at school had begun helping third years find good high schools with medical curriculum programs so you were constantly staying after school.
He continued to avoid your eyes. âI shouldâve defended you. You were right. Mei was being an ass and you donât deserve that. Only I can be mean to you.â
The last part almost sounded like a defense mechanism, a way to stop this conversation from becoming too heavy. You appreciated it more than you thought you would.
You elbowed him in the ribs. âIs it physically impossible for you to say something nice?â
âYes.â Miyuki nodded unabashedly. You scowled, but there was no heat behind it.
âFine, I accept your apology. Iâm sorry, too. I did kind of make a big deal.â
He shook his head, adamant now. âI was being a dick. You were right.â He looked at you, a little more meaningful. He elbowed you back. âNow, come on, Iâve been missing my favorite horrible pitcher.â
âKeep saying stuff like that and I wonât pitch for you.â
His laughter echoed off the houses, his eyes looking golden underneath the tawny glow of street lamps â
ââ attention to me. Hey!â
Tan fingers snapped in front of your face, making you jump as you were abruptly brought back to the present. Right. Studying, an annoying Miyuki (as usual), the impending end of course exam for your English class. You regained your bearings, finding a frowning Miyuki in front of you. The furrow of his brow told you he was concerned.
âSorry. Just got lost in thought for a little while,â you chuckled, a little embarrassed. Despite yourself, you noticed how the warm glow of the setting sun accented the golden flecks in his eyes, which were studying you seriously. You tried for a reassuring smile, but he clearly didnât believe you.
He called out to your mother. âIâm going to be taking her out for a few! Sheâs been working hard!â
You gaped at him and barely managed to slip a bookmark into your textbook before he shut it and slid it underneath the counter. Your mother popped her head out of the kitchen, smiling in that perceptive way of hers.
âOf course, Kazuya. Be back by six. Youâre more than welcome to stay for dinner and bring something to your father if he canât make it.â
He grinned at her, in that charming sort of way he always did for your mother and older sister. âYes, maâam!â
You sighed, taking off the bakery apron and reaching for your own baseball cap. You both had gone to a SoftBank Hawks game for his twelfth birthday and bought matching caps for it. It was one of your favorite memories.
You didnât truly care for baseball â definitely not like he did â but it made him happy, so you never really minded playing a good game with him.
By no means were you a legitimate pitcher, and as you two grew, you worried that your horrible pitching would hinder his performance since you didnât provide a true challenge, but he had constantly said he liked playing with you for fun.
âCompetitions are fun, too,â heâd agreed with your initial argument. âBut I donât have to be strategic or hard-working with you. Itâs always been better with you.â
You werenât sure you believed him, as youâd see the way his eyes lit up whenever he was out there on the field, hitting home runs, calling pitches (honestly, baseball was the perfect sport for him to show off his bossiness; you always pitied the pitchers assigned to him).
But, as you two walked to the park, you listening to him ramble about some baseball game, you figured heâd been playing catch with you this long, hadnât he? That had to count for something.
Third year meant picking your high schools, pulling all-nights to study for entrance exams and most importantly, keeping up your grades â all the while dragging a reluctant Miyuki right behind you.
âWhat if you canât get a scholarship? What if you do get one but itâs only for baseball? Theyâll really be paying close attention to your grades then, you know,â youâd lectured him for the umpteenth time since the first semester began. âHaving good studying habits wonât hurt you.â
âYes, it will,â Miyuki grumbled petulantly from his spot next to you on your bed, laying down with his arm tossed over his face. You rolled your eyes, picking out a pencil to use for your assignment that you were about to do.
âYou have no problem swinging three hundred times a day but when it comes to notes, what is it? You canât read now?â
âIâm illiterate.â
You climbed over his legs to retrieve your notebook from your backpack on the floor, then threw it onto his stomach, making him jump at the sudden impact. You climbed back over to your spot against the wall. âRead those. I dumbed it down for you.â
âThank you!â
You shook your head, grinning despite yourself. He was a real loser sometimes.
The two of you lapsed into a comfortable silence, punctuated by the sound of your little brotherâs laughter from downstairs. He was probably watching one of his kid shows again. When the bakery began to get busier with the new school year, TV had become a fixation for him, a surefire way of keeping him in one place.
You unfolded your legs out from beneath you, resting them over Miyukiâs legs. He didnât protest. Not that he ever did, really. Much to your pleasant surprise, Miyuki could be incredibly affectionate, always wanting to maintain physical contact with you. Whenever your class was taken on long field trips, his head always found your shoulder, though you knew it had to be uncomfortable for him because of the height differences between you two. He frequently draped an arm over your shoulders, if only to lean heavily on you and cause you to stumble â much to his amusement.
It was strange. Heâd done those things often when you were kids, and theyâd only increased in frequency as youâd gotten older, but . . . Why exactly were you noticing? Who cared? Miyuki sure as hell didnât.
Maybe it was because sometimes, on those long field trips, when the hum of the engine, the feeling of his warm body next to yours put you to sleep in an instant, youâd wake up with the phantom warmth still lingering, finding yourself missing it. Or when you couldnât help but notice the pleasant scent of something sweet and a little spicy whenever heâd lean on you and itâd be so overwhelming â his weight, the warmth, the scent â that your knees felt a little weak.
You pressed your mechanical pencil harder onto the page, finding your heart beating at what seemed like an unhealthy speed. That wasnât good. Why was your heart doing this now? All youâd been thinking of was Miyuki.
âThe heart should always be beating steadily. The only time it doesnât is when youâre high on adrenaline, youâre exercising, or ââ
âWhat about when you have a crush, Miss?â You couldnât recall who had asked that, but it had probably been some annoying underclassmen. A few of the other kids present giggled while the upperclassmen rolled their eyes.
The nurse smiled indulgently. âOr if you like someone.â
âHave you thought about what high school youâre going to?â Miyukiâs voice brought you out of your internal strife. You almost breathed a sigh of relief, desperate for that distraction. You turned your attention back to your assignment since youâd neglected that, too. Then, you realized what he was asking.
âNot really.â
You had.
Miyuki hummed quietly. You could see him glancing at you in the corner of your eye.
You wrote down the answer to an equation. âYou?â you asked.
âSort of . . . I think I might head to Seido.â
You couldnât say you were surprised. That guy â Chris, youâd learned his name was â had really gotten Miyuki going, a âpotential rivalâ to keep him on his toes.
âOh?â you asked, feigning surprise.
âYeah. I got an offer from them. Full ride for academic and baseball.â
âStudying pays off, doesnât it?â
âI canât believe you donât have a school in mind already,â he said, ignoring your jeer. He laid the notebook flat across his chest and turned his eyes up toward your ceiling. âWhat have you been doing in the medical club all this time?â
You snorted. âHelping the last third years get into good high schools. I donât know, Miyuki, I just havenât really thought about it that much.â Now, you were blatantly lying to him. Oh, youâd given high school a lot of thought. The idea of going somewhere far away â such as Hokkaido â detested you, and you knew Miyuki would love it if youâd go with him to Seido. In fact, any moment now â
âWhy not Seido? They have a great academic program, you know. Theyâre always in the top ten national rankings every year for academics.â He was trying to be nonchalant about it, but you could hear â and understand â the message under his words. Letâs do this together.
Your grip on your pencil tightened. The idea of being away from him was painful.
But was that the best idea?
You managed to stave off his questions, only promising to tell him your choices when you managed to find a few good schools. He left after dinner, taking a plate for his own father and your notebook, promising to read them. (You didnât believe him.)
When you went back up to your room, you went over to your dresser, pulling open the bottom drawer. It was the one with undergarments â one that Miyuki would never touch since he knew what was where. You brushed aside the articles of clothing and took out the thick envelope.
Mimayama School for Medicine and Science
It was in Kyoto, a huge campus that spanned an entire block and was the height of a skyscraper. It was a well-renowned school, one that had perfect statistics and scores in all subjects. The ideal high school. But it didnât have a baseball program. Not to mention that there was a three-hour train ride from here to Kyoto.
Your grip on the envelope tightened, denting the thick cardstock. The fact that youâd been invited there was something to celebrate, but you hadnât told your parents, having managed to steal the envelope before they could see it.
Maybe you wouldâve celebrated if you lived a different life. One where Miyuki wasnât there.
You felt guilty for thinking like that, but your sisterâs words echoed in your head.
âDonât allow feelings to influence important life decisions. Donât think about those sorts of things. You donât need them.â
Youâd been a first year when sheâd said that to you, strangely enough. Itâd been the same thing youâd repeated to your counselor during that horrible conversation about puberty. And youâd firmly believed it, though there was one exception.
Donât let others influence your feelings. Except Miyuki.
He was your best friend, after all. Youâd be cruel to not feel anything.
What were you going to do, then?
Your answer seemed to come sooner or later. More specifically, the day Miyuki got into a fight.
It had been a cool October day, baseball season already over for Miyuki so he had no choice but to hang around the campus after school while you went to your regular club meetings.
The meeting had been adjourned earlier than usual so Miyuki wasnât leaning against the wall like he usually would. The last text heâd sent you said that he was in the library, so you began walking over there. As you neared the doors, you passed a few girls, talking rapidly to each other.
â. . . fight. Thatâs so weird, Iâve never seen him lose his temper.â
âI know! Heâs almost always antagonizing someone else, I canât believe Tanaka was able to get Miyuki so riled up.â
You froze and turned to them, recognizing them as a few fellow classmates.
âWait, what happened?â You stepped toward them, drawing their attention. They became fidgety and sheepish under your eyes, avoiding eye contact.
âUm . . . Miyuki got into a fight with Tanaka a few minutes ago outside the library.â
What?
Miyuki didnât fight. He couldnât fight. Well, no, you were sure he had a few good moves on him, especially since baseball kept him in prime shape and there were his unfortunate experiences with his more violent seniors on the team but they were long gone. Since he was a third year now (and considerably taller and more muscled), no one would dare to mess with him. Especially because heâd proved his worth on the field, that he had a right to say the things he did. Itâs just that you knew he hated being at the tail-end of those confrontations. Having to take the hits, while refusing to say anything to any of the adults because they wouldnât do anything. The violence of it. Violence has no place in baseball, heâd once said. Anything someone needs to say can be done on the field.
More than that â he couldnât fight without risking expulsion. It would look horrible on his record and â he wouldnât be able to go to Seido.
âWhy?â you recovered quickly, not caring that you were being demanding now, probably too harsh if anything.
âWe donât know . . . We just heard it from some other kids.â
âWhere is Miyuki now?â He probably wouldnât answer your texts. If anything, itâd be exactly like him to hide this from you.
The girls shared glances again. âUm, I think he went to the boy's bathroom by 3-B.â
âThanks,â you told them shortly, then turning on your heel and heading towards the hallway for third years. You made the decision to not retrieve your first aid kit. Youâd lead him back to your house instead. He didnât need to be around the school with visible injuries.
Once you were at the boyâs bathroom, you hesitated. What were you supposed to do? Could you go in there? Would he allow you to even see him? Maybe you could wait. He had to come out eventually.
You leaned against the lockers next to the wall, wondering what on earth happened. Even disregarding his dislike of violence and the huge risk that comes with fighting, like those girls had said, he wasnât someone who got riled up easily. He was the one riling people up. But the fact that itâd been Tanaka made some sense; Ichiro Tanaka was the asshole in your class, always finding someone to pick on, always making unwanted advances on girls.
Miyuki may be an asshole in the sense that he could pick you apart and annoy you to death, but he had honor. (Plus, heâd never shown any interest in any girls or boys in your class ever.)
You rubbed your forehead tiredly, pulling out your phone to text your mother that you might be home earlier than usual. Just as youâd sent off the text, the door to the boyâs bathroom opened and Miyuki stepped out, his backpack slung over his shoulder, still not noticing your presence until youâd reached out to tap his shoulder.
You could see him tense, muscles stiffening. He was hesitant to turn around and you were about to call him out on it, but he turned before you could say. Your eyes widened as you took stock of his injuries.
âAre you okay?â you gasped, any thought of scolding him thrown out the window at seeing the busted lip, the cut on his temple, and the blossoming bruise on his cheek. A quick glance at his hands showed you the cuts on his knuckles, though they were only on his left hand. You knew he caught and threw with his right. At least heâd had that foresight. âWhat happened?â
He avoided your eyes. âI may have gotten into a fight with Tanaka.â
You huffed, glad to see he was acting normally. Well, as normal as Miyuki could ever be.
âNo shit. I know that part already â though I donât know why â but what did Tanaka do to you?â There was the underlying question in your words, one you wouldnât outright say because it would probably appease him. Did you win?
Miyuki picked up on it anyway, smirking but then wincing at the pain he was probably feeling on his lip. âI won.â
You pinched the bridge of your nose. âYou â I canât believe you. Come on, letâs do this at my house. We donât need someone seeing you.â You two began walking towards the exit. You shot him a worried glance. You couldnât imagine the potential repercussions this could entail. You didnât want Miyuki to be stuck here. You wanted him to leave, to go to Seido and become the best damn catcher to play high school baseball.
As if sensing your thoughts, he spoke. âNo oneâs going to say anything. Tanakaâs looking for a volleyball scholarship at some school in Hokkaido and his lackeys have their own scholarships they need to worry about, too. It was an unspoken agreement.â
You sighed heavily. âI donât want you to throw away your chances at a good baseball career, Miyuki. Especially not over a fight, which, speaking of, is very unlike you. So, regardless of that . . . what on earth happened?â
He stayed silent. You pursed your lips and led him to your house. It was easy to sneak past the bakery, where your parents and older sister would be preoccupied with the dinner time rush. The house would be empty, too, since your little brother was over at a friendâs house for a playdate.
You ushered him up to the bathroom on the second floor, dropping your bags off in your room beforehand. You shut the door behind you and locked it for good measure, then opened up the window to let some fresh air in. Miyuki was still silent, appearing introspective. For once, you were unable to find out what he was thinking.
You made him wash his face and hands first, taking his glasses and setting them on the counter behind you so they wouldnât get wet. Once he was finished and resituated on the closed toilet seat, you began tending to his wounds, first going back downstairs to grab an icepack and wrapping it in a towel so it wouldnât be too abrasive against his face. You worked on disinfecting the cuts on his knuckles, which werenât too bad. You had one hand cupping his, the back of his hand facing up as your fingers pressed against his palm to spread out his hand.
He grimaced at the burn of the hydrogen peroxide but didnât say anything. When you moved to wrap up his knuckles, you closed your hand around his fingers, trying not to focus on how the calluses rubbed against your skin. You moved on to the gash on his temple, murmuring a soft âsorryâ when he winced from the burn. He had to keep his glasses off, but his eyes were on the floor.
Youâd been applying an ointment to the cut when he spoke again. âTanaka said something . . . Something Iâm not repeating.â You paused, your eyes briefly flickering to his bandaged hand in his lap that clenched into a fist. âI couldnât let it slide. I know . . . you know how I feel about fighting but . . . it was about you. And Iâm not going to let him, of all people, talk about you like that.â
He sat up straighter, his eyes meeting yours. You froze, golden irises searing into you in a way that made your heart race. The lack of glasses made it all the more intense, your stomach doing flips in nervousness.
âMiyuki . . .â you muttered, feeling your face heat up. âI ââ
âDonât say you donât want me fighting because of you. I did it because youâre my best friend and no one gets to speak about you that way. No one.â
Miyuki was passionate about baseball. About his cooking. About the SoftBank Hawks. But never about you. Yet, here he was, speaking so strongly that you felt a little weak at this display of anger and . . . touched.
You pursed your lips, breaking eye contact with him to turn to the sink and take out a bandaid to put over the cut. You carefully covered the wound then took out another disinfectant wipe to use for his lip. You actually hesitated before you started your work, but it had to be done.
You brushed his chin with the back of your hand, avoiding grabbing it. He turned his head up with no qualms, but his eyes stayed on your face. You attempted to disinfect the cut on his bottom lip, but it proved to be more difficult than you thought. It could also be because your heart was racing and your face was itchy with heat. You swore silently and grabbed his chin with your hand to better clean.
You hated this. Here you were, close to his face, staring at his lips as you cleaned them. At least you had an excuse to stare, though.
You caught your train of thought and almost swore out loud. Where was that even coming from? When had you begun thinking of him like that? Yeah, Miyuki was good-looking, almost unbelievably so, but it wasnât anything new. So why now?
You realized far too late that youâd stopped moving the wipe on his lip, the white cloth blossoming red from the blood still leaking. He winced from your grip and you wrenched your hand back, uttering a soft âsorryâ again. You turned back to the sink to grab the ointment, only squeezing out a small amount so that it wouldnât be noticeable.
With shaking hands, you pressed your fingers to his jaw to angle his face once again, concentrating on anything but the feeling of his smooth skin underneath your fingers. You spread the ointment over the cut, trying your best to be gentle but also ensuring that it wasnât showing.
In a desperate attempt to distract yourself and to break hold from the heavy atmosphere youâd found yourself in, you lifted your head to look at him again, but before you could even think to speak, the look in his eyes made you stop. Your brain short-circuited at the look he was giving you, whether it was on purpose or not, you didnât know. You stood there frozen, still invading his personal space for the most part.
For a moment, it felt like time had stopped. His eyes looked warm underneath the light coming in from the window, casting shadows over the curve of his nose, making him look so much more older and â and handsome.
Then, like a warning siren, your sisterâs voice echoed in your head.
âDonât let feelings cloud your judgment.â
You sighed shortly, the loud noise shattering the moment. âHonestly, Miyuki.â You shook your head, turning around to toss the q-tip into the trash along with the other used supplies. You heard him make a surprised noise at your sudden movements.
You picked up his glasses off the counter and handed them back over then took a few steps back, leaning against the wall opposite to him, putting a respectable amount of distance between you two.
âI appreciate what you did,â you said, managing to keep the shakiness out of your voice. Heâd put on his glasses again, his eyes now impossible to read. âBut, god, I donât want you to not be able to go to Seido . . . That is where you decided to go, right?â
He shrugged. âProbably. Donât worry. I mean, I donât regret what I did. Not at all. But I do understand what youâre saying and Iâm not planning to make this a regular thing.â
You scowled, feeling the atmosphere around you lighten up. âI sure hope not. You donât need to be batting with cut up knuckles like that, you dummy.â
âI know,â he said quietly, before trying for a smirk, though it came out more like a pained grimace. âBesides, youâre here to fix me up, arenât you?â
You huffed, turning your nose up at him. âYouâre so annoying, Miyuki.â
âThanks.â
âShut up.â
But even as he began talking about the studying heâd managed to accomplish before heâd left the library and ended up face to face with Tanaka, you thought about your plans for high school. These feelings . . . Whatever they were, they werenât needed. Not right now. Not right before you two were picking out your high schools. You couldnât allow them to cloud your judgment.
At the same time, though, going to Seido with him . . . That seemed amazing. Another three more years seeing him, going through all the high school experiences, cheering him on at baseball games, it was all too dangerous. Far too dangerous.
It was dangerous because here you were, at risk of feeling something more than platonic feelings for a boy youâd known since you were eight, where you already know your feelings will never be returned.
First semester of your third year wrapped up quickly after that. With the start of your second semester, you received many offers from different schools all over the country. Your parents and sister were proud.
âThatâs our girl,â your father had grinned, reaching out to ruffle your hair, much to your displeasure.
âHey, make sure you choose a good school,â your sister said, giving you a severe look. You fixed your hair, not meeting her eyes.
âWherever you want to go, honey, weâll support you.â There was a heaviness in your motherâs tone, as though she didnât want you to go far. Youâd gotten an offer from the high school in this area, but you werenât satisfied with the curriculum. Staying here would mean ending up like your sister (no offense to her, of course, since she was happy). You wanted out of Old Town Tokyo.
Miyuki had gotten a lot of offers, too. Schools everywhere wanted him as their catcher. The powerhouse schools, like Inashiro, Teito, Seido (of course), even several schools from Hokkaido. It wouldnât be hard for him to make it as a pro. You were proud.
But he was set on Seido, and he was pressing you for your own decision, too.
âI have to start planning. Itâs going to be busy when we start up,â heâd told you, trying to convince you to spill which schools had sent you offers.
âIâm still thinking,â youâd lied. âBut if you really want to know, Iâve gotten one from Sakurazawa High.â
âOh, I know them. Theyâve lost in the first round of the West tournament for like, twenty consecutive years.â
You shot him a glare. âIs that all that matters?â
He chuckled, holding up his hands in a sign of surrender. âThey have great academics, donât they? But, you know . . . Iâm fairly sure that Seido is equal in terms of national academic ranking . . .â
That was another thing. You knew Miyuki wouldnât ever hold you back, just like you wouldnât hold him back. It felt like some sort of crime to ever try and stop him from pursuing his interest in baseball and vice versa for him and your desire to be a doctor. But you knew, just like he did, that Seido was a powerhouse school in both academics and athletics. Going there wouldnât hinder your performance nor his. Not to mention, you two would be together, right?
Except, it sounded horrible. The past few months had been stressful, because not only did you have to deal with the looks your mother was giving you about choosing a school way outside of Old Town Tokyo, but you also had to stave off the counselors who wanted your decision, along with Miyuki. Then there were your feelings for him. You werenât sure what they were, but you knew they werenât good. They were the type of feelings to inhibit you.
You couldnât be a good friend to Miyuki if all you were thinking about is how much you wanted to hold his hand and have him tuck you under his arm like so many other couples did. If all you thought about was how happy he looked whenever he was talking about baseball or talking about Seido and competing for starting catcher. If all you thought about was how pretty his eyes were and how handsome he looked whenever he genuinely smiled.
You werenât being a good friend. And you needed to fix that.
That night, you mailed the application to Mimayama. Two days later, you received your acceptance letter.
âMimayama? Thatâs so cool!â
âWow! Youâre serious about being a doctor, arenât you?â
It had meant to be a secret. Youâd only wanted your family to know and no one else. Youâd tell Miyuki when you had to. Preferably right before he left to Seido, or maybe when he was there already. Clearly, that had been too tall of an order.
Youâd notified your counselors of your acceptance and subsequent admittance into Mimayama, much to their happiness. Apparently, no such thing as student-to-administrator confidentiality existed because your homeroom teacher found out immediately and after publicly congratulating you, a group of girls had approached you, gushing over your acceptance.
Luckily, not many people had been there yet, though a few of your other classmates had eyed you curiously. Miyuki was running late, something or another about sleeping in. You didnât know â didnât care, since that meant you had time to do damage control.
âListen,â you began, trying to look as serious as possible. The girls leaned in eagerly. âKeep it to yourselves, alright? Donât tell Miyuki or anyone else. I donât want to start unnecessary rumors. Itâd be horrible if people thought I was boasting about it.â
They nodded, agreeing immediately. âOf course! But why not tell Miyuki?â
They were looking harder at you now, more analytical, more perceptive. It reminded you too much of your mother and sister. You came up with a quick lie.
âItâs a surprise for him. Iâll be telling him later on. Weâre going to different schools ââ those words left a bitter taste in your mouth and a numb ache in your heart ââ so Iâm trying to prepare, you know?â
They soaked it up. Of course they did. Miyuki was popular with girls and theyâd always wondered about your friendship with him. Saying all this to them was probably enough gossip to last for the rest of the year.
âTotally! Weâll be quiet, promise!â
You smiled at them, glancing over at the door just as Miyuki stepped into the room, looking like a total mess. The girls turned back around and began whispering to each other, sending occasional glances towards him then to you.
You ignored them in favor of watching him shuffle over to the desk in front of yours. He collapsed dramatically into his seat, laying on top of your desk instead of his own. You raised an eyebrow.
âAre you done?â
âIâm tired,â he muttered. âExhausted.â
Now a little concerned because a tired Miyuki wasnât a good thing (though he was absolutely adorable), you leaned forward. âIs everything okay? Did something happen?â
He lifted his head and you clicked your tongue at the circles underneath his eyes. His hair was messier than usual, leaving you to contemplate whether or not heâd actually brushed it. âI was finishing the application to Seido. Mailed it off this morning.â
âWhen was the deadline?â
âTomorrow.â
You rubbed your forehead, exasperated. âMiyuki . . . Youâre so lucky you donât have baseball anymore.â
âNot until next year.â He yawned and you tried your best to not think that he looked so adorable all sleepy and tired. This was a bad thing. He needed his sleep. âIt was worth it. Hey, Mei wants to talk to me today after school. Dâyou want to come along?â
You pursed your lips. Well, you still werenât fond of Narumiya, even after heâd begrudgingly apologized to you. He was Miyukiâs friend â sort of â and youâd wanted to lead Miyuki straight to his house so he could take a nap after school. This would just have to be done before, then. âSure, but after, weâre going back to your house and youâre taking a nap.â
He grinned lazily at you. âThanks.â
You turned away, ignoring the burn in your cheeks. âWhatever. Try not to fall asleep in class.â
He did end up falling asleep. And of course, you covered for him despite your earlier words. You had to wonder. If these feelings werenât there, would you have done it? You glanced at him from the corner of your eye as you two made your way to the park. (After school, youâd dropped off your bags at his house since his was closet and began towards the place that Narumiya wanted to meet up at.) He yawned again, something heâd been doing frequently today, and you decided yes, no matter your feelings, you would gladly take cover for him.
Maybe that was where the problem had started.
Miyuki had always been the best in baseball, striving to work hard and prove himself, calling for aggressive plays and focusing even if something hadnât gone his way. Despite his tendency to laziness when it came to exams and such, he was a diligent student.
In some ways, you wanted to be like him. Charismatic and charming when it counted, quick-thinking in difficult situations. After all, that was how doctors needed to be, right? They needed to be decisive, no hesitancy in their movements. You had someoneâs life laid willingly into your hands and you couldnât disappoint.
Had this admiration planted the seeds for your feelings?
You didnât know and you didnât have time to think it over as you came to the park. You fell a little behind as you realized there were other boys present, all from different leagues, though you knew they were part of Narumiyaâs friend group. If Miyuki noticed you partially hiding, he didnât say anything about it.
âWell, well, whatâs with the gathering of the all-stars?â he asked, announcing his presence to them, in that conniving way of his. The boys turned to him, a few curious eyes glancing over to you, but you resolutely stood silent with your arms crossed, not offering your name. Thankfully, Miyuki didnât offer to introduce you either.
He began listing off their names and leagues (you wondered briefly how he knew that, but of course, if it was baseball, it was important). When he finished, hands still casually in his pockets, he turned to Narumiya. âDid you call them all here, Mei?â
Mei grinned. âYeah. And you, Kazuya. If you come with me, I can form my ultimate team.â
You raised your eyebrows. Well, you were surprised at this turn of events, but it wasnât exactly far from something Narumiya would do. Miyuki laughed, sounding surprised as well.
âI donât really care if youâre not the catcher, but Narumiya wants you,â the one named Shirakawa said, probably trying to help Narumiya convince Miyuki but it just sounded like he was bored and would rather be somewhere else.
âInashiro invited you, too. Right, Kazuya?â
It was strange. Youâd never been the possessive or jealous type. Miyuki had his fangirls â of course â but heâd never paid attention to them. Hearing Narumiya call Miyuki by his first name made you tense. Miyuki, you could understand â he called everyone by their first name, whether it was welcomed or not and youâd been calling him by his last name for as long as you could remember, more by habit now rather than respect. Heâd never asked you to call him by his first name, either, so thatâs the way itâd always been.
But here was the ever-so-condescending Narumiya Mei, speaking so casually with your best friend. It made you uncomfortable, but you pushed that away. This wasnât the time nor place.
âSo, why donât we make the ultimate team together? If we all get on the same team, we could take nationals.â That was what this was about then. Barring your brief discomfort at hearing Narumiya call Miyuki by his first name, you felt a little proud that even such a self-centered pitcher like Narumiya and the others knew how valuable of a catcher that Miyuki was.
âInashiroâs coach has a lot of experience under his belt and they have the best equipment in Tokyo. Itâs a great environment, too,â Kamiya added.
âNot to mention, you wonât have to play against Narumiya. Youâre in, too. Right, Miyuki Kazuya?â Shirakawa, as much as you hated to admit it, had a point. Youâd seen Narumiya pitch. He was head and shoulders above a lot of the pitchers in your year. That was probably why he was so arrogant. But the guys made it sound like Miyuki would actually be averse to going head-to-head with Narumiya, when in fact â
âIâm sorry, but I already got an invite from Seido a while ago. I can���t join you guys.â His hand came up to his neck, a sign that showed he was a little uncomfortable being cornered by so many.
âWhat? Are you being serious right now?â
Narumiya stood up from his crouch. âSeido, huh? Theyâve only gone to nationals once since their old coach quit. Compared to what Coach Kunitomo has achieved, Coach Kataoka is just way too green.â
You shifted on your feet, turning your eyes back to Miyuki. He scratched his neck in a shifty movement. It was coming any moment now. âWell, itâs not really about that,â he began. âInashiroâs a team with a bunch of all-stars like you guys, right? So . . . I want to face you as an opponent.â
Of course. While the others were visibly shocked, you bit back a small smile. Youâd seen it coming from a mile away. Sure, Narumiya could probably prepare a team to take nationals on with Miyuki and his other friends, but Miyuki wasnât like that. He didnât want the easy out. He wanted to work for it. You recalled his words from first year, after his loss against that second year catcher, Chris.
âHow else am I supposed to be the best?â How else, indeed. There would be no better way than to face Inashiro than on a different team, still at a powerhouse school with a competent team where Miyuki would fit right in.
âAre you stupid?â
âOh, youâre too kind.â
âItâs not a compliment!â
âKazuya.â Narumiya didnât look too surprised. Well, you could give him props for trying. âIâm gonna ask you one last time ââ and for being so annoyingly persistent as well.
âSorry. No.â Miyuki didnât sound too apologetic.
Narumiya looked a bit irritated and his eyes shifted to you. âYouâll regret it, Kazuya. Is it because of her?â He calls you out, by your first name. âAre you going to Seido as well?â
You glared at him. âI donât remember giving you permission to call me by my first name, Narumiya. And let it go.â
Shirakawa and Kamiya snorted as an affronted look passed over Narumiyaâs face. âHey, youâre always so mean to me ââ
You turned your nose up, ignoring him. He didnât know when to quit.
Most likely in an attempt to defuse the situation, Miyuki took a step back and said his goodbyes, then turned around and guided you away from the park.
âI wasnât expecting that,â he confessed when you two were a reasonable distance away from the park, well on your way back to your own neighborhood. âBut it was a very Mei thing of him to try.â
âExactly what I thought,â you agreed. âHe is right, too, you know. Youâd probably be able to take on nationals without any problems.â Miyuki opened his mouth to protest but you elbowed him in the ribs, continuing with a small smile. âBut I know. Challenger. I get it. Itâs a surprisingly level-headed decision coming from you.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âNothing.â You coughed to hide your snickers at the look on his face.
His house was empty as usual, his father most likely next door in the factory working on whatever project that needed to meet its deadline soon. Youâd never asked about Miyukiâs mother, but you never had to. Youâd seen the picture frame of a handsome, younger Toku Miyuki and a beautiful women standing next to him, a small bundle in her arms, standing in front of the factory. It didnât take a genius to know that his mother had probably passed when he was younger.
Upon the entrance to his room, you went to his drawer where some casual clothes of yours were kept â purely for practical reasons since he had his own clothes in your dresser, too, along with many sweaters youâd kept. When you came back from the bathroom, he was already sprawled out on his bed, changed into comfortable clothing.
You went to take a seat in his desk chair, but his tired voice stopped you. âHey, what are you doing? Come here.â
Your heart skipped a beat in your chest. You two had slept in the same bed when you were kids every now and then, but it had stopped when youâd gotten older. Well, you had gotten more aware of it every time you had shared a bed â of him right next to you. Evidently, heâd never cared because he had no problem taking a nap whenever he crashed your room.
You climbed over him so you were next to the wall. His bed wasnât big, only a full-size, so it was enough for you two but no more than that. He stretched, yawning quietly. You hesitantly laid down next to him, facing him with a reasonable amount of space between you two. He turned to face you, blinking sleepily as his face was pressed into the pillow, probably putting the edges of his glasses into his face uncomfortably.
âYouâre gonna break your glasses,â you muttered disapprovingly, reaching out to pluck them off his face. He squinted, readjusting to the absence of his glasses as you leaned over him to place them on the nightstand. You made sure that you didnât touch his body as you did so.
He hummed quietly, drawing up the blanket to his waist. You abstained from it. He radiated enough body heat on his own, plus your internal temperatures were always high when you were in close proximity with him.
âYou never said.â
His sleepy voice brought you out of your thoughts. Miyuki was clearly having a hard time staying awake, so you indulged him. âSaid what?â
âWhere youâre going. When we saw Mei. You didnât deny it, but youâre not going there, are you?â His eyelids fluttered and you found yourself enraptured with the way his eyelashes just barely ghosted his cheeks. âIâm not going to be mad if you donât, if thatâs what you think.â
You tensed. He scooted closer to you. âI . . . Well, Seidoâs a great school, Miyuki.â
His eyebrows furrowed, his eyes finally shutting, but he didnât drift off. âYouâre confusing.â
âWhat . . .?â
âI donât want to hold you back from a good school. Thatâs what you deserve, especially for putting up with me this long ââ your heart broke just a little at that admission. Did he think he was a burden to you? ââ so I wonât be mad. Just tell me where youâre going.â
âI . . .â I canât tell you. I canât tell you why. Iâm leaving, not because itâs a good school, but because I need to leave you. I canât be around you. If I tell you now, I just might back out and go somewhere near you. âIâm still weighing my options, to be truthful.â
He hummed again, a sign he was still listening, so you pushed on. âI got an invitation from Oya, too, in East Tokyo. Theyâre a public school and they have a good academic program. If I remember correctly, they went to Nationals five years ago.â
âNot bad,â he mumbled. âMake a decision soon, though. I take it that means youâre not going to Seido, then?â
You were surprised that he was still managing to make logical conclusions despite being on the verge of unconsciousness. âYeah, probably not. It wouldâve been great to be with you, though,â you lied. It wouldnât have been great. You wouldâve suffered from your unrequited feelings, having to see him make it big in high school baseball, watching the entire nation fall in love with him.
He nodded, eyes still shut. âThatâs okay. Just tell me where youâre going soon, okay.â
âI will.â Another lie. You were on a roll today, werenât you?
He drifted off after that. You knew when heâd fallen asleep because you could feel the bed dip as he became dead weight, utterly relaxed, his breathing deep and steady. Your eyes roamed his face as you become more relaxed, finding comfort in being so close to him.
That fight had left an unnoticeable scar on his temple, usually hidden by his glasses, then the cut on his lip had healed up finely so there was no trace of it â at that point, your eyes lingered too long on his lips â and the cuts on his knuckles werenât that noticeable either, probably something he could blame on his gloves.
Your heart stuttered in your chest as he shifted even closer to you. You had nowhere to go, your back pressed against his wall. You sighed quietly, shutting your own eyes to take a nap of your own. Whatever. These last few months were ones you had to treasure because the likelihood that youâd see him during high school was little to none. Really, the chances of him wanting to see you would probably make it even lower.
You fell asleep, weighed down by your decisions and restless for what the future might hold for your friendship with Miyuki.
(Those thoughts really didnât bother you when you woke up lying on his chest and he had his arms wrapped tightly around your shoulders. You were mortified, though.)
Graduation from your junior high had come and gone with no problems. You were in the top ten, sitting comfortably as number two while Miyuki sat as number ten; you werenât surprised by his rank, by any means.
Youâd avoided packing your own things, too. You would need to be in Kyoto by April 10th. They started the school year much later, for whatever reason, but it just meant that youâd be seeing Miyuki go off on March 28th, three days before the first day of school. And youâd managed to avoid telling him your final decision.
It all seemed to be catching up because the walk to the station was filled with an uncomfortable silence. Miyuki had said his goodbyes to his father and your family, your little brother strangely sad at the disappearance of his âMiyu.â (A nickname that had you rolling in laughter when heâd come up with it and always managed to make Miyukiâs face turn red.)
His train would be leaving in ten minutes. You both sat down on the bench at his platform.
âSo,â Miyuki prompted. âWhich is it?â
When you looked at him, his eyes were hard. He was irritated. Rightly so. Youâd been dancing around your own leave for several months now and here he was, about to leave to Seido and he still didnât know. Youâd briefly contemplated allowing him to stay mad at you. Let him blow up. Perhaps it would give you the shock you needed. But he didnât deserve that.
You sighed softly, guilt eating away at your insides. âMimayama.â
You felt him tense up beside you as he made a strangled noise. âIn Kyoto?â
You nodded, turning your eyes to the ground. He didnât say anything for a few seconds and you clenched your hands into fists, ducking your head lower.
âThatâs a good school.â His voice was leveled, cool and indifferent. Somehow, it hurt more than having to hear anger. âTheyâd be stupid not to accept you.â
You hummed softly.
He sighed shortly. âI donât â what the hell? Why did you . . . What did you even gain from that?â
There it was. You turned back to look at him, then balked at the hurt on his face. âI . . . didnât want to worry you.â
âYou worried me more by not telling me,â he replied shortly. âThatâs so far away.â Are you going to be okay?
That was more than you deserved. Youâd been such a shitty friend for the past two years. Here he was, still trying to be a good friend.
You tried for a smile. âItâs not Hokkaido or anything, Miyuki. Iâll be fine. And Iâm sorry . . . I just â I didnât know. I donât know.â
He stared at you. You met his eyes head on. You had to show him that youâd be fine. This was what you needed. You had the reckless urge to transfer back to a school here in Tokyo, if only to be close to him, but it was muted. Doing this was for the best of your friendship.
âIâm still mad.â Understandable. âAnd Iâm leaving now. Baseball starts up immediately so I wonât have time to talk to you, especially since youâll probably be busy with school, too. Solving this wonât be as easy as it was when we still lived here, you know.â
Would it even be solved?
âWeâll figure out a way,â you said, despite yourself. Something had changed. Your distance in your friendship had been noticeable. A child could notice. Whether it had been conscious or unconscious was up to debate. Evidently, though, it had hurt Miyuki and that was the last thing you wanted.
. . . Right?
You were moving all the way to Kyoto for the sole purpose of burying those feelings for him. Focusing on school. Rebuilding . . . Rebuilding your friendship. Right, thatâd been a priority, too. But could it be done? Youâd messed up.
âWell, letâs not spend our last few minutes together arguing or mad at each other.â Miyukiâs voice brought you out of your thoughts. He stood up, holding out a hand for you. You accepted, trying to imprint the feeling of his calluses and the way his palm felt against yours into your mind.
He wouldnât give up on your friendship, though, would he?
The train pulled in, the draft carrying stray pieces of your hair, hydraulics hissing loudly as it eased to a stop. You were stunned as Miyuki pulled you in for a hug. It was tight, almost painful, but he was so warm and that sweet and spicy scent was overwhelming you in the best possible way that you couldnât help but hug him back just as tightly.
âDonât forget about me over there,â he murmured into your ear, warm breath tickling your sensitive skin. You suppressed a shiver.
âI-I wonât.â
He stepped away, sighing softly as the doors unlocked and popped open for the cabin in front of you. He picked up his bag. âIâll see you later. Weâll talk.â
You nodded. He hesitated to leave, a strange look passing over his face as he fought with himself over something, but then it was gone just as quickly as it had come. He turned away and there was something foreboding about seeing him walk away from you. A cold feeling blooming in the pit of your stomach.
This wouldnât be the last of him. Youâd go to school in Kyoto, get over your feelings and rekindle your friendship with him. Things would get better. They would.
They had to.
Interlude: start
Miyuki wasnât sure what was going on.
Youâd been distant for the last few months, clearly having something on your mind and heâd waited patiently for you to come to him. But you never did.
Instead you sent him off, finally telling him where you were going. To the Kyoto Prefecture, of all places. Was he mad? Yes, and he sort of had a right to be.
He had to wonder. Had all those times heâd pestered you for your answer, had you lied to him? Applying to Mimayama and getting accepted wasnât a last minute choice. Prestigious schools like that always had application deadlines earlier than other private and public high schools.
So, why hadnât you told him?
It was something that plagued him for the entire train ride to Kokubunji, even when he made it to Seido High and received his dorm number.
Had you . . . figured it out?
Heâd tried his best to hide his feelings and he felt that heâd been largely successful. Youâd acted normally as you would and this felt like too much of a secret for you to hide if you knew. You werenât one to hide what you were thinking, especially when it came to him. But falling in love with your best friend wasnât normal, was it?
He couldnât help himself. Heâd never say it, but youâd stood beside him for the past six years, you were always so supportive, so patient even when he didnât deserve it. So how could you even possibly begin to feel the same way? He wouldnât openly admit this either, but he had more flaws than he had strengths.
Sure, he was . . . conventionally attractive and he was great at catching, but what else was there? It wasnât like heâd be the type of guy to shower you with gifts or anything. Compared to so many other people, he wasnât good enough.
He sighed heavily, continuing to unpack his things. His roommates were two third years but they were out, probably practicing. For once in Miyukiâs entire life, he didnât feel the urge to practice.
Despite himself, despite wanting to give you the benefit of doubt, he wondered, had you attended Mimayama in an attempt to run away? From him?
Immediately, he felt guilty for thinking that way. Mimayama was an excellent school within itself, one youâd thrive in. He couldnât be so selfish to assume that youâd gone there just to avoid him. You were trying to get a good curriculum. He was trying to get better in baseball. You both had your own agendas.
It wouldnât be like you to allow your feelings to influence your decisions. Especially when it came to such an important decision.
His previous question came up again. Why wouldnât you tell him? Were you scared heâd be mad? Or were you trying to protect yourself from something else? Did you think heâd try to convince you to stay?
His frown deepened. Well, that was a good question. Kyoto was so far away . . . If youâd stayed in Tokyo, it wouldâve been easier to see you but now that youâd be all the way in Kyoto, the chances of seeing you were slim to none. Youâd probably only see each other during winter break.
Regardless of that, though, he was sure he wouldnât have tried to stop you.
Did a small (or very large if he was truthful) part of him want you to go to Seido with him? Yeah, but things donât always work out. Friends donât always get to stay together. Apparently, you had realized that sooner than he did and taken advantage of it.
But your reluctance to tell him was what had gotten on his nerves. He deserved an answer from you. (Right?) One that hadnât been last minute, one where you two could discuss it. One where he could begin to make plans to see you, arrange methods to talk during the school year. But here he was, sitting on the barren side of the dorm with no real plans to see you again until December, irritated at you.
Until he had a proper answer from you on why youâd done it (because he deserved that too), heâd give you the space you needed to sort out your thoughts.
Besides, come April 10th, there would be three hundred miles between you two. Space would come easily.
Interlude: end
Things seemed to be fine for the first few months. You and Miyuki kept up moderate contact, calling and texting when you were able. There would be odd bouts of absence on his part, something heâd blamed on baseball practice and you could understand. As far as you knew, Miyuki had been able to secure the position as starting catcher with little to no problems. The way he felt about it was a different story.
âChris . . . He injured his shoulder. He was removed from first string. I took his place.â
You pursed your lips. âThat stinks. Iâm sorry, Miyuki.â
Going to Seido to get that spot as starting catcher had been Miyukiâs main goal. And heâd already achieved it within three months of being there.
You knew heâd wanted to go toe-to-toe with Chris to properly fight over the spot. It probably didnât feel too good to have it conceded to you.
âStarting catcher is starting catcher, I guess. Thereâs nothing I can do about it. Just have to get to Nationals and win.â
âYou can do it,â you said, putting as much encouragement into your words as possible. You absently read over your textbook, waiting for his reply.
âSo . . . You must have come up with a good reason for not telling me about going to Mimayama, right?â
Surprised, you dropped your pencil, his words catching you off guard. You hadnât necessarily forgotten about his promise to figure things out between you and you were fully prepared to apologize, but explaining why was an entirely different ordeal.
You had been silent for too long, because he sighed shortly on the other line. âCome on. Did you think Iâd be mad? That Iâd try to stop you?â
You tried to think, tried to formulate an adequate answer. Would lying save you? Could you continue on in your friendship after lying to him about it?
âI just . . .â You were at a loss for words. You hadnât expected him to bring this up. But of course, in classic Miyuki fashion, he would want to catch you off guard. Make sure that you wouldnât be able to lie. âI donât know.â
âWhat do you mean you donât know?â he scoffed. âItâs not that hard.â
You bristled. âWell, damn Miyuki, you said you wouldnât have gotten mad and maybe you wouldnât, but look at you now.â
âI have a right to be mad now,â he replied waspishly. âYou lied about it for how long? How many times had I asked you? I know Mimayama has the earlier deadline for applications because itâs a private school. You made this decision and you didnât tell me about it. I thought we told each other everything. I mean, thatâs what best friends do, right?â
âSince when have you ever cared about how other friendships function? Youâre only doing this because youâre mad. Youâre not thinking straight.â
Miyuki laughed suddenly, in a callous manner heâd never used with you. âIâm not thinking straight? Well, we both know the answer to that,â he sneered. âMe and you are best friends just like anyone else, but now that I have a genuine problem with you lying, suddenly Iâm the one whoâs needlessly comparing ourselves to other people, right? Iâm the wrong one here, yeah?â
âI didnât say you were,â you disagreed. âIt was just â I donât know. I didnât tell my family for a long time, too.â
âI get it. Itâs a personal decision. But lying to me about it is where I donât like it.â
âYou donât have to!â you snapped, finding yourself fed up with his attitude. âIt was . . . a personal decision, just like you said. I had to come to terms with it myself, too, you know.â
It wasnât a lie, by any means. The day after his fight and after youâd filled out the application, you had stood by the mailbox so long, envelope in hand, the next door neighbor had come out to ask if you were okay.
âYou couldâve told me that youâd made a decision. I was worried youâd end up stuck there with how much you were pushing it away. I wouldâve respected your boundaries, you know.â
His voice had quieted considerably and you werenât sure how you felt about it. Did it mean he was calm now? Understanding? Or was his anger and hurt phasing him so much he couldnât muster the energy to be loud? You hated this. You hated not being able to see his face, being able to gauge what he was feeling. Relying on his tone was getting you nowhere.
âI . . . know.â Maybe itâd been irrational, but your decision had been the one thing he hadnât known about. You could be so weak when it came to him. If he even knew that you had made a decision, it felt like he already knew where you were going, as though he could see right through you.
You and Miyuki could read each other like the back of your hands, unwillingly or willing. You knew his ticks, his dislikes, his fears, and vice versa. Alongside your feelings, the choice to attend Mimayama had been one of the few things youâd ever kept from him.
âThen why do it? Thatâs all Iâm asking for. Thatâs it. Just an explanation and we can be done here.â He sounded almost desperate. It was disconcerting. Miyuki Kazuya wasnât desperate; he didnât beg. He was above that. But his voice â
You pinched the bridge of your nose, inhaling shakily. This was too much, it was all too much. Youâd regret it later on, maybe, when you finally got your head back on but you couldnât stand it right now. He couldnât know.
Under no circumstances could he know that you were in love with him.
âI canât do it.â
Miyuki was silent, for one, two, three seconds, then â
âI guess weâre done here.â
You tried again. âMiyuki, I â â
The call ended abruptly as he hung up first, not even sparing you a chance to talk. You stared at your phone. Maybe that was what you deserved, though. You werenât being the greatest of friends, but you just wished he would let it go. Why was it so important? Did it truly both him that much? Regardless of whatever it was, he wasnât going to be letting it go anytime soon â that much was apparent.
The abrupt hang-up had hurt a lot more than you thought it would. (You certainly wouldnât admit it out loud, though.) Miyuki wasnât exactly the gentlest person and he could be mean, but heâd never been that way with you.
Something told you that this was only a small dose of what he could do, that he wasnât completely shutting you out. Not yet.
You tossed your phone behind you, not minding the rough thump that came after. You dropped your head onto your textbook, sighing heavily. There was the slightest of stinging behind your eyes, but you shook it off, squeezing your eyes shut tightly. It wouldnât do well to be crying. Dinner would only be in thirty minutes and you didnât want to explain to your classmates why it looked like youâd been crying.
You dug into your nails into your palm, the pain relieved you from the burn in your eyes. The urge mercifully passed.
You sat back up, taking a deep breath. This would have to be dealt with later, you promised yourself, turning your eyes back to your textbook in a vain attempt to start your assignment again. All you two needed was space, some time to cool off and regain your bearings. Then, youâd solve this.
You didnât solve it.
Baseball took up a handful of his time, so when you sent a wary text to him three weeks after your phone call, you didnât receive a reply back. You then found out that that exact day, Seido had been at a game and had won, qualifying them for quarterfinals. Of course he wasnât going to reply. He was probably busy basking in that afterglow of victory.
So you let it go.
But then, Seido was eliminated. You got that news from your classmates, a girl who apparently had a cousin attending the opposing school. When youâd asked, she had said proudly, âInashiro.â
It felt like too much a cruel joke. But when you returned to your dorm and looked up the game, sure enough, Inashiro had won. The game had been four to three. Narumiya was their star â their ace. If you hadnât had any real reason to dislike him before, you certainly had one now. You sent an apology to Miyuki, trying your best to be comforting.
His reply â albeit cold â had been relieving. Things werenât as bad as youâd thought they were.
But then he didnât contact you for the rest of the summer. And that was where the space between you two grew. It wasnât only physical anymore â heâd stopped contact with you completely.
Summer passed and you descended into autumn, where temperatures dipped and the trees began to lose their leaves.
There was still no contact between you two.
You sent him the occasional message, just a random update about this or that, fooling yourself into thinking that he was just busy. The fall tournament was coming up and if they made it, theyâd have a spot at the Spring Invitational. It was another chance for Nationals. But your messages stayed silent, save for the messages coming from your family.
Seido lost during the semifinals at the fall tournament; you sent him a text.
iâm sorry about the fall tournament⌠you guys played a really good game. text me back when you can.
Maybe he felt your desperation, somehow, through the screen and even though hundreds of miles separating you two.
You sat up abruptly as the little words underneath your message changed from Delivered to Read. You waited, your heart racing in your chest. But no message came.
You tried to rationalize. Heâd just lost. Their ticket to Nationals was a pipe dream once again. He wouldnât be up to talk immediately after, right?
It sounded foolish, even to yourself.
As though your problems with Miyuki werenât enough, you got into an argument with your mother.
She had apparently believed that once you graduated high school, youâd come back home to work in the family bakery. That was the last thing you wanted to do.
Summer break had been an awkward affair because of it. You had envisioned summer break as time away from working and from the stress of high school, but your mother had other plans.
You were forced to be the cashier, much to your displeasure. Your father had patted your shoulder consolingly, while your older sister told you to stop complaining so much. Your younger brother â already seven-years-old â could only giggle at your predicament while he went to his friendâs house to spend the night. You were almost envious at his freedom.
You had no idea if Miyuki was back in the neighborhood since he wasnât taking the time to answer your texts. You knew that if he had come back, he had no business to be outside of his house, either, so you decided that you would probably never know.
The fifth day of summer break started bright and early with you on the cash register. It had been slow, though, the heat of the sun discouraging people from walking out and about. The wall-length windows of the bakery did nothing to hide the sun, either, and the air conditioner was mostly focused on the table area rather than behind the counter.
The heat had started to make you sleepy but before you could actually doze off on the job and piss off your mother, the bell above the door rang, signaling a new customer. You straightened up, trying to blink the sleepiness away.
Thankfully, you didnât have to try too hard, because the newest customer turned out to be Miyuki Toku.
âG-Good morning, sir. What can I get for you today?â Your voice was steady, thankfully.
He stared up at the menu, dark eyebrows furrowed and eyes narrowed behind his glasses. He was dressed in work clothing, grease staining various spots, a black baseball cap tucked over his hair. It was no wonder Miyuki himself was so handsome. His father was a handsome man for his age, the only sign of his age being the lines around his mouth and forehead, and the slightest hint of grey in dark brown hair and in his stubble.
âTwo coffees and three sweet rolls,â he finally said, his eyes flickering to you.
You dropped your eyes, hurriedly ringing up his total and scribbling down the drink order to hang up for your sister to do. His eyes were the exact same shade as Miyukiâs. Of course they were, they were father and son, but it . . . made you miss Miyuki even more.
You handed back the money and grabbed some wax paper to pull out the sweet rolls from the display case of pastries. As you put them into a paper bag and folded it up neatly, he lingered near the pick-up counter. You wanted to ask him if Miyuki was back, but would that give you away? Maybe he already knew of the fight, if Miyuki had told him, but that sounded far-fetched. Miyuki wasnât that open with his father.
You glanced around the bakery; all the customers were satisfied at the moment and nobody was waiting in line. You glanced back at Miyuki's father. He was looking over the display case with uninterested eyes. It wouldnât hurt to ask.
âI-Is Miyuki back in the neighborhood?â you asked before you could lose your nerve, handing the paper bag over to him then stepping back behind the cash register, as though it could protect you from any unwanted questions.
He seemed surprised that you were speaking at him, brown eyes widening briefly before he cleared his throat. âNo. Heâs still at Seido. The coach keeps them for summer break.â
âOh.â
That sucked, but knowing Miyuki, he was probably using that off-season time to get better.
âHave you been speaking to him?â
Now, you were the one surprised. When you looked back up, he was watching you with scrutinizing eyes. It reminded you so much of Miyuki that you had to avert your eyes. âNot really, sir. Weâve just,â you cleared your throat, âheâs busy. Iâm busy. Our schedules donât line up very well.â
âMimayama, right?â
You looked back at him, furrowing your eyebrows. How did he know?
âKazuya told me. Thatâs a good school,â he paused awkwardly, but before he could continue, your sister called out his order.
He picked it up and lingered in front the counter, shifting awkwardly before finally saying, âWell . . . keep in touch with him.â
You barely had time to get out a âhave a good day.â Did he know of your fight? There was no way that Miyuki couldâve told him, right? And if he did, then why was his father so nice? You knew Miyuki wouldnât mince words and he probably wouldnât hold back if he was talking about your argument.
âHey.â You jumped as a wet towel smacked your back. âStop looking so sad. It turns people off.â
You scowled, turning around to face your older sister with an insult on the tip of your tongue, but it died quickly at the semi-serious expression on her face. You both stared at each other for a few seconds before she slapped the wet towel onto your shoulder again.
âLoser.â
âShut up!â
It was his birthday. He was officially sixteen-years-old.
You typed out a quick message. Maybe your conversations were beginning to be made up of your outgoing texts and nothing else from him, but you werenât going to abandon him on his birthday. (Though, a small mocking voice in your head told you he had an entire team to spend his birthday with.)
Youâd sent the text and went to put down your phone on your desk, but to your pleasant surprise, it buzzed a few seconds after, signaling a text.
It felt almost too true to be good. You unlocked your phone quickly, fumbling for the messages app. But when you clicked on his name, the message waiting for you wasnât what youâd expected.
Error 1404. The number you are trying to reach is currently unavailable. For further inquiries, please contact â
Had he blocked you?
You tried again, but the message continued to pop up in reply to every text you sent.
You stopped trying, the words of the text seeming cold and callous, almost taunting.
Was he this petty? You had never believed him to be petty. Cruel, sometimes, sure, but never petty.
You tried calling. It rang two times before an automated message picked up.
âWeâre sorry, but the person you are trying to reach is â â
You hung up. This couldnât be a coincidence. But why . . .?
You scrubbed your hands over your face roughly, feeling the familiar burn behind your eyes. Nothing was seeming to go right for you. Sure, you were at a school where you were put to work, but you were fighting with the only friend you had, with your mother about your choices for the future, with yourself over some stupid feelings.
Had it bothered him that much? Was this something to end your friendship over?
Evidently, to Miyuki, it had been.
December and January marked record-breaking lows with surprisingly heavy snowfall. You stayed on campus, burrowing in your room through the beginning of December to study hard for exams. Winter break brought you back home, where your sister had staged an intervention, surprisingly enough.
âWhatâs the deal with you and Miyuki?â she asked suddenly one day, when you two were in the kitchen at your home, making dinner for that night.
You continued your work, undeterred and unaffected. âWhat do you mean?â you asked tiredly.
She reached over to swat the back of your head, gaining a glare from you.
âDonât glare at me, brat. Youâve been all mopey since the summer. I know something is going on,â she huffed, giving you a glare of her own.
You were prepared to shrug her off, turning to her to tell her off, but she was wearing that expression again. The one youâd seen during summer break after your run-in with Miyukiâs father. She looked serious. You hesitated.
Youâd been dealing with this all on your own, with no one else to talk to. You definitely didnât have Miyuki â not that youâd tell him about it, anyway â and certainly not your parents. Your mother would probably disapprove of your feelings since Miyuki wasnât the type of guy to settle back down in his hometown and your father would disapprove because this was someone after your own heart.
Your sister was the next best thing.
That was how you found yourself telling her about the argument, about his lack of communication, and because you couldnât avoid it, about your feelings for him.
She remained silent while you spoke, a pensive look on her face. When you finished, you shifted nervously on your feet, glancing at her in the corner of your eye.
âThis is because of me, isnât it?â
You blinked. âWhat?â
She paused from cutting up a vegetable, laying the knife down on the cooking board and turning to look at you. âWhat I said to you when you were in junior high. About focusing on yourself and not letting others influence your decisions.â
âI guess . . .â you murmured, agreeing reluctantly because you didnât want her to blame herself for it. Luckily, that wasnât what happened.
âYouâre an idiot,â she muttered, grabbing the dish towel and hitting your shoulder with it. She tossed it back onto the counter before turning to you. âAn absolute idiot.â
âWhat the hell â â
âYou played yourself, kid! I get it. These feelings are scary and new but running to Kyoto is not the answer!â she hissed urgently, looking annoyed.
Your hackles were raised. âYou literally said â â
âI know what I said, you fool! You had good intentions, but look where that got you.â
You winced. That was fair.
She groaned loudly. âDid it ever occur to you that you were letting your feelings influence your decision when you decided to go to Mimayama?â
You stared at her, eyebrows furrowed. âWhat?â
âFor as smart of a kid you are, youâre kinda dumb when it comes to feelings.â
You scowled at her. âFeelings are dumb! Itâs easier to memorize algebra equations than it is to handle what Iâm feeling!â
She pinched the bridge of her nose. âListen to me. I understand that you thought putting distance between you two and lying to him about your choice would help, but you were blinded by your own feelings. In your desperation to forget, you made a rash decision. I know Mimayama is a good school and worrying about your education is worthwhile, but are you even happy there?â
You stilled. âHappy?â
âYouâre hopeless!â she bemoaned.
âHey, it was your advice! Donât get mad at me,â you protested, unwilling to take all the blame for this.
She grimaced. âFine. Iâll take half. But itâs redacted as soon as we fix this.â
You balked. âFix this? No, there will be no fixing here. Iâm going to suffer the consequences of my actions â and partially yours â for the rest of high school and thatâs it.â
âYou don��t even know if he feels the same,â she pointed out.
âHe doesnât,â you said firmly. âWhy would he? After everything Iâve messed up on, I refuse to let him know. Itâll only make things worse.â
âItâs called taking a risk,â she muttered, finally turning back to finish chopping up the vegetables. âYou wonât know if you donât try.â
âWeâre not even talking to each other anymore. I think,â you grimaced. âI think he blocked me.â
She paused mid-slice. âIâm going to murder that boy.â
âNo, you will not!â
âThis is better than homicide,â your sister muttered gleefully as you two watched your mother wrap up a plate of food. âSo much better.â
Your mother faltered in her actions briefly, having heard your sisterâs words, then resumed quickly. She was probably used to it.
Your little brother was waiting impatiently by the door, some action figure grasped in his tiny hands.
âOne of you take that to the Miyukiâs. Itâs a holiday gift. Dress appropriately!â With that, she left the house, your younger brother following after her, the door shutting firmly behind them.
âIâm not taking that,â you said immediately after. Itâd been several days since you had told her about your problem and she hadnât brought it up since. Maybe for good reason, too. You had time to think over what she said.
Her question about whether or not you were even happy at Mimayama was . . . conflicting, as much as you hated to admit it. What did it matter if you didnât like it? It was a good school, one that would boost you ahead. It was giving you experience in the medical field, experience you couldnât receive at a regular high school.
But at the same time, there were regular high school experiences that you were missing out on. Mimayama rarely had dances or anything of the sort, typically hosting an end-of-the-year banquet for the third years to congratulate them on their progress, but that was the extent of their dances. They had no sports programs, save for a volleyball team that was in sore need of motivated players and a better coach. All the students were always so competitive, constantly fighting for the top rank, making passive aggressive comments about grades. It was tiring.
It also made you think. Had Mimayama been the best choice?
âYou donât even know if heâs back,â she countered, drawing you out of your revere. âPretty sure all the sports teams had one week less of winter break than regular students.â
âI donât care. Iâm not â â
You stopped as you heard voices outside. It was your mother, very distantly. She was saying something, but the words were muffled by the door.
Your sister pushed you away to go towards the front window that overlooked the yard, peeking through the curtains. She gasped, making you take a wary step forward, but before you could ask her, she was turning around, grabbing your wrist and dragging you upstairs. You allowed her, figuring it was a lost cause to try and stop her.
âWhatâs going on?â you grumbled. She turned into your parentsâ room, yanking you over to the window that overlooked the street.
You both kneeled on the ground under the window and she pointed up at it, grinning.
âHeâs here,â she said in a sing-song voice that made you want to cover your ears.
You cautiously looked out the window, at first finding nothing to look at, but then your eyes latched onto the figure currently taking his bags out of a taxiâs trunk. Your heart kickstarted in your chest. Miyuki.
It was a bit far away, but you could recognize him anywhere. He looked taller, lean with muscles he didnât have before. His skin looked tanner, too, no doubt from all the time heâd have spent in the sun. He was dressed in a black hoodie and jeans, looking far too good for someone who probably just threw that on without giving it any thought.
You dug your nails into the windowsill. A small, childish part of you wanted to run downstairs and out the door to tackle him into a hug. You were craving the feeling of his arms around you and feel his usual tight, almost vice-like, grip. You bit down on your lip.
âYou look like a love-struck fool,â your sister whispered, sounding awed. You shoved her, making her wobble precariously from her crouch, then fall over, hitting the ground with a loud thump.
You continued to stare out the window, and you were grateful for your hyper-fixation on him, because you were able to catch the slight movement of him turning his head towards your house. You fell away from the window, the curtains fluttering back to their place.
âWhat?â your sister grumbled, rubbing her elbow. âThat hurt, you know.â
âI donât care,â you muttered. âHe looked. If he saw me, Iâm going to die.â
She scoffed. âDonât be so dramatic.â She laid down on her side, propping up her cheek with her hand, shooting you a cheeky grin. âSo? You wanna give them the food, now?â
âNo.â
âWhat do you mean, no? Why not?â
You shot her an irritated side glance. âSeeing him doesnât make me want to âtry things out,â as you say. What part of âweâre not talking anymoreâ do you not understand?â
She scowled. âSo, youâre giving up?â
You looked away. âI guess so.â
It was silent for a few seconds before she huffed quietly. âWell, Iâm not. Stay here. Iâm gonna give them the food. When you hear the door close, look out the window, but stay hidden.â
You stared at her as she got to her feet and left the room. This . . . couldnât be good.
Nonetheless, when you heard the door shut from downstairs, you peeked out the window again. You caught sight of her walking down the sidewalk, her jacket and beanie on to fight against the freezing cold, the dish cradled in her arms. At that point, the taxi was gone and you suspected Miyuki had retreated into the warmth of his home.
When she walked up to the house and rang the doorbell, she sent a furtive glance to you, making brief eye contact before turning back forward. The door opened and she looked surprised for a split-second before schooling her expression into one of ease. You squinted, trying to make out who she was talking to.
She took a half-step back and you finally saw that it was Miyuki whoâd answered the door; he leaned out of the house, nodding and saying a few things before accepting the dish with a gracious bow. Your sister returned it and turned around, walking back towards the house.
You dropped away from the window, making sure to fix the curtains carefully this time, then dashed out of the room and down the stairs. You didnât have to wait more than thirty seconds before she was entering the house again, letting in a burst of icy air. Once she had locked the door and began taking off her shoes, jacket and beanie, you cleared your throat.
âWell?â
She looked at you, grim, and you prepared yourself for bad news, but then she said, âHeâs cuter than I remember him being.â
âThatâs not what I wanted to hear.â
She shrugged. âYou two would be cute together. His looks cancel out any ugliness you have.â
âAgain. Thatâs not what I wanted to hear.â
She sighed. âWhat do you want to hear, kid? I donât know . . . He seems more mature now. Are you two really fighting about this as bad as you say?â
You glared at her, irritated that she was doubting your words just because he seemed âmore mature.â âI have no reason to lie. Itâs not like youâve ever liked him that much, anyway.â
âThatâs true,â she murmured. âBut he made you happy, so that was all that mattered to me. Heâs not doing that for you anymore.â
You toed the edge of the carpet with your foot, avoiding her eyes.
âIf youâre truly incessant on not making up with him, then find something that makes you happy,â she continued. When you glanced at her, she looked serious again. You decided you didnât like that look on her face. She coughed.
âIf not, I refuse to see your mopey face around here.â
âComfort me or insult me! Pick one, dammit!â
As much as you hated to admit it, your sister had a point.
So when you returned to school, you tried to find something that made you happy. Either an end goal, or even another friend.
You found that continuously telling yourself to find something made things a little bit better. You didnât think about the absence Miyuki had left you. You thought about ways to raise your grade or make the other kids mad about your success.
You even found a friend â a quiet girl in your class who was pretty low in the class rank named Arakawa Akemi. You didnât care about the rank stuff too much. (Only when it could be used to make your snobby classmates angry.) If anything, had she been in a regular high school, she probably wouldâve been top of the class.
So, your first year ended with a secure friendship and excellent grades. Your relationship with your mother had gotten better, mostly because of the shining commentary that all your teachers had about you and your behavior during the afterparty of the third yearsâ graduation ceremony, where students, families and parents mingled. Your sister was annoying as ever â though a bit proud â and your brother was merely happy about seeing you again.
You knew, when your second year started up in full force, that your friendship with Miyuki was gone at this point. He hadnât seen you at all during winter break and didnât make an attempt to contact you at all. You hardly ever saw his father, so you couldnât ask him about it, either.
You were sad at this realization. Almost seven years of friendship flushed down the drain. And the worst part was that your feelings hadnât even faded with that.
After the Spring Invitational, Miyuki had gotten . . . famous. He was known nationally, media calling him the âcatcher of his generation.â Known for his aggressive plays, people loved him. When youâd seen the magazine with an article about him in it, you were proud.
Despite his lack of communication, you were still proud that he was doing what he loved. And he was good at it. You could never be angry about him doing well in what he loved.
When youâd seen his picture in the magazine, your heart still beat like crazy and your stomach still did flips. You hated it.
Even without almost a year of no contact, you were still infatuated with him.
You found yourself busier than youâd anticipated when second year started up again. You were required to put in volunteer hours at a hospital, so youâd found yourself preoccupied not only with homework, but work from the hospital as well.
The busy schedule was good; it helped you keep your mind off things, especially when the Summer Tournament started up and Seido blazed through the first rounds, then qualified for the quarterfinals. They were constantly making news articles, something or another about their new first year pitchers that were blowing competition away; usually those articles had companion editorials about Miyuki and how quickly he was improving. You tended to stay away from those.
You felt guilty for avoiding the games as much as you did, but at that point, there was no real need for you to keep up. It wasnât like Miyuki would be calling you afterward to ask for your opinion on it.
The way you saw it was that if there was no Miyuki, then there was no need for baseball, either.
Unfortunately for you, however, your classmates happened to be avid baseball fans, so when you came to class the Monday after the weekend of the finals, you werenât surprised to hear them talking about it.
â . . . what messed up their game.â
âYeah, after that deadball, there was no way they were getting their momentum back.â
âItâs all that first year pitcherâs fault. Sawamura, right? If he hasnât fallen apart, maybe they wouldâve been able to continue.â
You listened curiously, only brought out by a nudge to the arm. Akemi was giving you serious side-eye. âYou could look it up, you know, or even ask,â she murmured.
âLook what up?â
She elbowed you again.
You sighed, leaning forward to tap on the shoulder of your classmate sitting in front of you. He turned around, his eyes widening at seeing you interact with him.
You gave him a polite smile. âAre you guys talking about the finals of the summer tournament for West Tokyo?â
âYeah. Between Seido and Inashiro.â
You sat up straighter. You hadnât realized that itâd be between them, but of course, it made sense for them to be the finalists. Two of the three baseball powerhouses in West Tokyo.
A queasy feeling had settled in the pit of your stomach, but you pushed on.
âWho won?â
âInashiro. Their ace, Narumiya Mei, was a complete monster but honestly that first year pitcher â Furuya, right? â was insane . . .â
You sat back, staring at the plastic of your table. Akemi hummed softly and leaned to show you her phone. It was an article, presumably on the game. You read the headline.
Seido loses to Inashiro by 4-5
The article was detailed, filled with baseball jargon that you didnât bother trying to decipher. You latched onto a few pieces of important information; Seido batters unable to get a hit off Narumiya for the majority of the game, the deadball by that first year pitcher Sawamura Eijun in the bottom of the ninth inning and Seidoâs ultimate loss. You sighed heavily.
âGreat.â
Akemi shut off her phone, watching you carefully. âThatâs it?â she asked quietly.
Youâd told her about everything that had happened between you and Miyuki. Mostly as a precursory warning that apparently, you could be dumb when it came to your friendships; youâd try to be better with her, but fair warning and all that. Though, you had to give credit to yourself, since your errors were really because of your feelings and while Akemi was pretty and very kind to boot, Miyuki still held your heart.
But that was it.
You shrugged, pointedly looking away from her. âWhat am I supposed to do? Itâs not like I can talk to him anymore.â
Akemi said nothing else on the matter, looking forward when the teacher entered and started up class. And you didnât bring it up again, either. But you still had to sit through the excited murmurs of your classmates, biting down the urge to defend Seido whenever someone would badmouth the team for whatever reason. (At that point, you were irritated with yourself. You didnât even know anyone on the team except for Miyuki. Why should you feel the need to defend them?)
The majority of summer break â wherein you stayed at school for extra classes â was filled with talk of Nationals, mostly about Inashiro blowing through the rounds until the finals, where they ended up as runner-up. For the half of the last week of break, you headed back to Tokyo, where you visited your family and managed to avoid working in the bakery under the guise of needing to study (which you actually did need to do).
You knew Miyuki wouldnât have been back, probably training with the rest of his teammates. When you passed his house on your way to another cafĂŠ to study at (since youâd probably be roped into doing some form of work if you went to your own), you pointedly avoided looking at his home and the factory.
It was time for you to move on.
Despite your best efforts to hide behind the menu, Narumiyaâs face lit up upon recognizing you.
He grinned brightly; there was less baby fat on his face than you remember. He looked taller, too, adding to his maturity.
He calls you out â by your surname, thankfully. You didnât think youâd be able to handle if he called you by your first name. Youâd probably walk straight out of the cafĂŠ . . .
âItâs so good to see you! How are you?â
You sunk in your chair as other customers glanced at you, irritated. Narumiya was unbothered by their glares, taking a seat across from you even though you hadnât invited him to do so. He was just as annoying now as heâd been two years ago.
âI didnât say you could sit down,â you said, annoyed.
âWe need to catch up!â
âWe donât.â
He grinned. âHave you gotten meaner over the last few years?â
Your grip tightened on the menu briefly, but you took a deep breath, turning your eyes back to its contents. You would ignore him for however long you needed. He would get the message sooner or later.
âAre you meeting Kazuya here? Iâll wait with you. Maybe he and I can catch up, too.â
âNo,â you replied stiffly. âIâm here to study in some peace and quiet.â
You looked at Narumiya over the top of the menu, then glanced pointedly at your bag sitting in the third seat between you two. He followed your gaze and made a small noise of dissatisfaction.
âHow boring. Do you keep up with him?â
You studiously ignored him, turning the page of the menu.
âIs that a no, then?â
You continued to ignore him.
He huffed petulantly. âCome on, donât tell me youâre still mad about what I said? I was some annoying first year brat in junior high. Iâve changed.â
You looked over the menu again, eyebrow raised in doubt.
âI have!â he protested.
You rolled your eyes. âWhatever. Can you please leave now? I need to study.â
âStudy for what?â he frowned, then. âWhat school do you go to? Shouldnât you be on break?â
âYouâre asking too many questions.â
âThen sate my curiosity and answer them!â
You huffed this time, finally surrendering to your fate. âFine. Iâm going to Mimayama right now and I took extra class over summer break. We always have homework.â
âMimayama, huh?â Narumiya looked at you closely. âAll the way in Kyoto?â
âYes.â You turned back to the menu, but your head was beginning to ache from switching between squinting to read the small text and looking up to Narumiya. Or maybe that was just Narumiya . . .
âIs that why you and Kazuya havenât been talking?â
âI didnât say anything about that,â you said, feeling a frown form on your lips. âItâs none of your business, anyway.â
âCome on! Whenâs the next time weâre gonna see each other?â
âNever, hopefully.â
He pouted. âYou donât mean that. Come on! Tell me about it. Who would I even tell?â
âYour friends. Your sisters. Miyuki.â
Narumiya laughed, but it sounded forced. âAs if I still talk to him too.â
You looked at him this time and he had a bitter smile on his lips. He suddenly looked tired â worn out. You couldnât imagine from what, though.
His smile tightened. âYouâre not the only one with problems.â
You pursed your lips. âEvidently. If you listen, Iâll listen too.â
He frowned, looking away, clearly not liking the prospect of airing out his vulnerabilities.
âItâs a fair exchange,â you added before he could refuse. âAnd Iâm the last person to judge, if thatâs what youâre worried about. I wouldnât judge even you, Narumiya.â
He grumbled. âAt least call me Mei.â
You did your best to offer advice but he waved you off.
âIâm doing it because it was fair and I needed to vent. Donât worry about me. Iâll deal with it.â
You eyed him disbelievingly. âI have no problem helping you, either . . .â
Another lazy wave of the hand. âDonât worry your pretty little head. Iâm fine. Now, whatâs the deal with you and Kazuya?â
Mei leaned forward, unabashedly stealing a fry from your plate. You two had ordered your meals before Mei dove into his problems concerning pitching, the team, and the first year catcher he had to deal with now.
You listened intently, finding yourself sympathizing with him, much to your own surprise. You knew, rationally, Mei had his own problems â of course, he was only human â but for him to be this open, you appreciated it. It made you feel at ease. Maybe Mei wasnât as bad as youâd painted him to be.
You pushed your plate to him, appetite having disappeared, but he pushed it back toward you, pointing at the food with an intense expression on his face. âEat.â
âI canât talk and eat at the same time,â you pointed out.
He leaned back in his chair, crossing his arms over his chest and eyeing you with narrowed eyes. âYou can take breaks and eat.â
âIs the famous Narumiya Mei worried about me?â
âNever mind, you can starve!â
You smiled slightly and launched in your story, punctuated with breaks to eat or drink some water. Mei listened to all that you had to say, only interrupting to ask a question to prompt more details. He didnât seem to judge, but you couldnât tell for sure; his facial expression stayed composed throughout your talk.
When you finished, you found yourself suddenly conscious of his eyes on you. You squirmed a little in your seat, poking tentatively at the cold fries on your plate. You looked back up when he sighed, slouching in his seat.
âWe both canât catch a break, can we?â
You snorted. âNo kidding.â
âIf it makes you feel any better, if I was in your place, I mightâve done the same thing. I mean itâs not the right choice, but solidarity or whatever.â
âThat doesnât make me feel better.â
âAnyway,â he cleared his throat, evading your glare. âItâs fine. We can actually do something about your problem.â
âYou know, we can also do something for you too â â
He waved you off. âIâll deal with it eventually. But you . . . We can do something here.â
You didnât like the look on his face, the conspiratorial smile on his lips beginning to grow as you shook your head. âN-No, definitely not. Besides, why would you want to help me? Iâve been pretty mean to you these past years . . .â
Mei shrugged. âThatâs how most of my friendships start.â
You sighed. âRegardless, Iâm not â weâre not doing anything about it. I just told you to vent. Weâre finished with that.â
âYouâre giving up, then?â he asked, unintentionally echoing your sisterâs question from last year.
âI . . .â You frowned. âIf itâll save me the heartbreak, then I guess so. Heâs not even â not even talking to me, Mei. His message is loud and clear.â
âWell, heâs dumb. You and I both know that. Why should you listen to him? You have to try.â
âI canât.â
âYou donât want to,â he corrected. âWhat do you have to lose? Your friendship is already in shambles, youâre going to school all the way in Kyoto so you wonât have to see him if it goes rotten and itâs not like you two live that close. Maybe telling him will fix things.â
âAnd what if it makes it worse?â you asked sharply. âIâd rather we leave it like this.â
âAssuming for one moment that he doesnât feel the same â â
âHe doesnât.â
Mei ignored you. â â then telling him will yield the same ending to your friendship as it did before. Except now itâll be official. Itâs a better way to break things off, anyway.â
âI have no business to mess his life up like that,â you said stubbornly.
âYou want to reconcile, donât you?â He suddenly asked, scrutinizing you.
âWhat?â
âReconcile with Kazuya. Youâd like that, wouldnât you? But itâs not that easy. Heâs going to want an explanation and he can be cruel. Heâd probably make you choose between him and not explaining.â
You avoided Meiâs eyes. He was right. Miyuki wouldnât accept you with open arms. Heâd be affronted and demand an explanation. Rightfully so.
âSo, what? I donât tell him and we break things off or I do tell him and my feelings arenât reciprocated so he breaks things off all the same to save us from the awkwardness?â
âOr you somehow manage to reconcile but still keep it to yourself. Itâs unlikely, though. I wouldnât be surprised if this bothered Miyuki. Youâd probably do him a favor if you told him,â Mei finished, lacing his fingers together on the table.
âA favor,â you snorted disbelievingly.
âNow,â Mei continued, ignoring your tone, âletâs say he does have feelings for you. Which he does. Honestly, did you see the way heâd look at you when we were in junior high? It was gross.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
Mei rolled his eyes. âBecause youâre just that unattractive or what?â
You shifted, uncomfortable. âI donât deserve him.â
âShut up.â
You blanched. âYou â â
âYou and Kazuya are perfect for each other. That sounds like something heâd say about you, too. Iâm not here to listen to you depreciate yourself. Iâm here to help.â
You softened as he aimed a displeased frown at you. âThanks, Mei,â you said, truly meaning it.
âYouâre welcome. Iâm great, arenât I?â he preened, a happy grin replacing the frown. âNow, assuming he liked you â which he does â heâd want to know if you felt the same. So, telling him maximizes the possibility of reconciling your friendship. Plus, maybe you get a boyfriend out of it, too.â
âBoyfriend!â
âObviously. That tends to be what happens when two people like each other.â
âDonât get sarcastic with me, Narumiya Mei!â
Meiâs words left a significant mark on you.
You left the cafe thinking over the possibilities (sparing no thought to the homework that hadnât been completed). But the thought of confessing seemed . . . strange. Could you be so forward to actually go after Miyuki and tell him? Heâd probably avoid you as much as he could.
You werenât looking to make a fool out of yourself, either, so you certainly didnât want to try going to Seido. Going to his house and cornering him there seemed to be your best option, but the next break where heâd be home was Christmas and that was four months away. That was okay; there was plenty of time to work things out.
But it also gave you time to back out.
You chose not to discuss this with Akemi, knowing sheâd encourage you to tell him as well. For now, you just wanted to make your own decision without outside influences (excluding Mei since youâd made the unfortunate decision of giving him your LINE account).
The rest of August was split between school, Akemi, Mei and your deliberations. Mei constantly kept you updated on the start of the fall tournament, finding every chance to talk about Miyuki â which led to Meiâs usual declaration of taking Nationals next summer. You continued to mull over the decision of telling Miyuki, always finding yourself becoming anxious at the notion of facing him again.
At the same time, you missed Miyuki. If things didnât go well, at least youâd spoken to him one last time.
It was a decision that demanded great thought. No one was going to have a part in influencing your choice (not even Mei). You couldnât half-ass it or do it on the fly. You needed to have some organization when it came to deciding.
The call was what threw your entire plan off its axis.
Youâd been in the middle of composing a text to Mei, demanding to hang out since heâd seemingly dropped off the face of the earth following Inashiroâs loss to Ugumori. You knew it had to do with those problems heâd told you about in August and you werenât going to let him deal with it alone.
It was almost funny how much your friendship with Mei had grown in such a short time. While he could be unruly, irritating and arrogant, he seemed to have a softer side when it came to you, toning down his need to get a rise out of someone. It reminded you of Miyuki, but you shelved that thought quickly. It was a comparison that had no reason to exist.
Dutifully ignoring the review for your English class on your desk, youâd been in the middle of typing out a word when your screen changed from the conversation between you and Mei to the call screen. You eyed the number warily. It was from Tokyo, but it wasnât one you recognized. Your thumb hovered over the decline button but you huffed and answered it. If it was a telemarketer, you could nip them in the bud right now before they got the idea to call you back.
âHello?â
âEr, is this â ?â The voice on the other line proceeded to give out your full name.
âYes, this is. May I ask who Iâm speaking to?â
âUh . . .â Another person on the other end said something, but it was too quick for you to grab onto. âI know that, Zono! Shut up!â
Your frown deepened. âIâm . . . hanging up now.â
You went to pull away but the guy spoke again, hurriedly. âNo, no, hold on! My name is Kuramochi Yoichi, Iâm the shortstop for Seidoâs baseball team.â
What the hell was a player from Seido doing you? You glanced at the calendar mounted in front of you, finding the words Seido vs. Yakushi final @ 1 marked down for today. So, the game mustâve been over then. Didnât these boys have better things to be doing right now?
âHowâd you get my number? And whatâs the reason for calling me?â you asked, trying to sound as polite as possible. You were a bit irritated, though.
âYou know Miyuki, right? Miyuki Kazuya?â
âUnfortunately.â
Kuramochi coughed, though it sounded suspiciously like a laugh. âRight. Well, he sort of mentioned you today, before we went to the hospital, so I figured I should give you a call â â
âHospital?â you interrupted sharply. âWhy are you going to a hospital? Did something happen? Was he injured?â
âEh, he was but itâs not too serious. I think. So, yeah, he said to not call you otherwise youâd âkick his ass for getting hurtâ so I thought why not? Let him suffer a little bit for trying to hide his injury.â Kuramochi sounded nonchalant about the entire thing, so maybe it was okay, but you were still confused.
âExplain.â
âHe was tackled at the plate by a pitcher from Seiko High in our semifinals and trust me, he wouldnât have said anything unless someone else had noticed. Iâm not sure if anyone else noticed, but if they did, they didnât say anything. I told him . . . Well, I told him not to fall apart until after weâd won,â Kuramochi admitted sheepishly. You pursed your lips in disapproval.
âIf he showed any sign of bringing the team down, Iâd tell the coach but he didnât for the most part. Unfortunately, another one our teammates noticed and brought everyoneâs attention to it so the coach knew by the middle of the game.â
âDid he continue to play? Or was he benched?â
âNo, he played the entire game. Miyukiâs our cleanup, too, so it wasnât a bad move â â
âAre you discounting the fact that he struck out a few times?â the other guy on the other end of the line asked.
âShut it,â Kuramochi snapped. âIt was better for our team morale, too. That bastard is aggressive. We might not have won if heâd been benched.â Then he coughed, seeming to suddenly realize that heâd called Miyuki a bastard with you listening. âSorry.â
âItâs fine,â you muttered tiredly, rubbing your temples to stave off the incoming headache. âSo, what? He was taken to the hospital?â
âYeah. We got here like fifteen minutes ago. He was . . . pretty out of it. Probably from the pain. Weâre waiting for him right now. But, uh, I guess I called to see if youâd like to come and see him. Donât worry about his father, I know someone else took care of that already.â
âWhere are you guys?â you asked, more out of curiosity than anything.
âTokyo General.â
âAnd how did you get my number again?â
âMiyukiâs phone.â
Kuramochi mustâve copied the number from Miyukiâs and into his own. You were surprised that Miyuki had even kept it. You sighed heavily, turning back to the conversation. âYou do realize we donât even talk anymore, right? Has he even told you about me?â
Kuramochi was silent for a few seconds. âNot really, but heâs always closed off. I did notice the lack of conversation for you on his messages, though. I donât know, I just thought Iâd tell you. You donât have to come if you donât want to see him, but as soon as we get his room number, Iâll text you from this number.â
âThat sounds fine. Thanks, I guess.â
âNo problem. Sorry for bothering you, though.â He hung up quickly before you could reply. You dropped your hand holding the phone into your lap, staring at the calendar. You had two finals this coming Monday and you needed to study. But was this your chance?
The way that Kuramochi has phrased it . . . It sounded like Miyuki was joking about it. In his pain-induced haze, had he forgotten about the ruins of your friendship and joked about you? Or was he conscious about what heâd been saying?
It was all so confusing.
You gritted your teeth at the oncoming headache and stood up, the chair scraping loudly against the wooden floor. You packed up your notebooks that you needed for studying, grabbing your wallet as well. A quick search told you that the next train to downtown Tokyo would leave in thirty minutes. You bought your ticket, sending a silent mental apology to your father whoâd see the purchase and probably freak out.
The dormitory wasnât too lively, meaning you could make your escape unnoticed. You notified the resident assistant of your leave â one of the teachers for your year â and she let you off without much problems, only stressing for you to be back before curfew tomorrow. After boarding the train with no problems and sending Akemi a message about your impromptu leave, you dove into your studies but found that you couldnât concentrate. You had too many worries, too many thoughts.
This was going to go very well or very horribly.
After the three-hour train ride from Kyoto to Tokyo, you arrived at the hospital at six. You had met Kuramochi in the lobby of the hospital and he led you to the in-patient wing.
Kuramochi was an interesting individual. He was stiff, overly-polite in a way that said he was trying too hard. He probably felt uncomfortable actually seeing you in person.
âDoes he have to stay overnight?â You asked, fingers tightening over the strap of your bag. When studying had escaped you, you obsessed over what sort of injury he could have. Was it sprained ribs? Had he torn a muscle? Or was this worse?
âEh, only one night. He kicked up a fuss about it but we pointed out that heâd fainted from the pain. Better safe than sorry,â he explained as you two stepped into the elevator. He pressed the button for the second floor.
You looked at him sharply. âHe fainted?â
Kuramochi grimaced and nodded. âLike I said, he was pretty out of it. Heâs fine now. Conscious and all that.â
âWhat about his father?â
Kuramochi reached up to scratch the back of his neck. âSaid heâd come tomorrow.â
You sighed softly. Yeah, that sounded like him.
There was a soft ding as the doors slid open, Kuramochi stepping out and briskly leading the way. His cleats were loud against the tiled floor, disturbing the quiet environment of the second floor. Your stomach twisted uncomfortably.
You made it to a room but just as heâd lifted a hand to pull the door knob, you stopped him.
âWait.â
He looked questioningly at you, his hand paused in the air. âWhat?â
âI donât think this was a good idea . . .â You fidgeted with the strap of your bag, swallowing thickly. Your heart was beating like a drum in your chest and you had the ridiculous thought that everybody could hear how loudly it was beating.
Kuramochi scanned your face and he became serious, seeming to sense that you were genuinely doubting yourself.
âWhatever happened between you two,â he said, hushed. âItâs fine.â
âIt was my fault,â you mumbled. âWhy we stopped talking.â
âSomehow, I doubt that. But I donât know your story. Listen,â you looked at him, finding him meet your eyes earnestly. âNow is the best time to fix it. Whether it goes well or not, I donât know. But at least you tried, right?â
What do you have to lose?
You took a deep breath, steeling yourself. âYouâre right.â
âYou look like youâre about to throw up.â
âThanks.â
Kuramochi stared at you, then nodded to himself, as though heâd just realized something. âIt makes sense now,â he mumbled under his breath, making you frown.
âWhat â â
He opened the door before you could ask what heâd meant and you instinctively jumped behind him as several voices floated out of the room.
âAh, Kuramochi. Is everything okay?â a woman asked.
âYeah. Just had to pick up one of Miyukiâs visitors,â he replied, staying in the doorway, probably sensing you hiding behind him.
âIs it â ?â another voice asked, sounding like the one youâd heard on the phone.
Kuramochi didnât respond, simply stepping into the room, leaving you standing in the doorway for everyone to see.
There was only another guy your age in there and he looked utterly panicked at your presence. There was an intimidating man as well, dressed in the Seido baseball uniform â the coach presumably â and then a woman standing next to him, dressed in formal clothes. You turned your eyes to the hospital bed, but instead of meeting those familiar brown eyes, you were met with his bowed head, his eyes averted to his legs. You noticed his clenched fists on his lap and felt your heart drop to your stomach. He was angry.
You bit your lip then bowed to the two adults, introducing yourself, âIâm an . . . old friend.â
The two adults looked at Miyuki for confirmation. The air was uncomfortably tense. You saw him sigh minutely before he nodded.
With his confirmation that you werenât some stranger trying to sneak in, they introduced themselves as the coach and scout of Seido; the other guy introduced himself as the Zono youâd heard from the phone before. You accepted them politely, but a stifling silence ensued afterward.
You snuck glances at Miyuki in the corner of your eye. He had raised his head, but his eyes remained on the white wall in front of him, eyebrows furrowed.
âWell, we should head out, then. Miyuki, will you be okay here?â Takashima asked, turning to look at him.
âIâm fine.â
His voice had dropped since junior high, but he still sounded the same. Just like the Miyuki you once knew. Except he sounded tired. You felt guilt bubble in the pit of your stomach, knowing you were probably going to stress him about more.
One by one, they all exited the room. Kuramochi had hissed something to Miyuki before he left, sending you a nod of solitude. When the door finally shut, you werenât sure what to do with yourself. You shifted on your feet awkwardly. The silence was absolutely unnerving. You briefly considered just fleeing and never coming back, but that would be too cruel. Why should you show up abruptly then leave just as suddenly?
Yet, Miyuki still hadnât spoken.
You took a deep breath, ignoring the racing of your heart, preparing to say something â anything.
Miyuki beat you to it. âWhy are you here?â
Hurt pierced your heart. You faltered at the cold tone in his voice, the apathy, the indifference. Miyuki raised his head to look at you and any remnants of a response flew out of your head. He had matured, baby fat disappearing from his face and leaving someone else behind. Miyuki had grown into his looks. Those familiar brown eyes that had often glowed with mirth were hard, almost unrecognizable, burning into you with searing intensity.
You fidgeted with the strap of your bag, dropping your eyes to the floor. âKuramochi called me. Said you were here so I â â
âYou thought you could come and visit like we were âold friends?ââ Miyuki finished for you callously.
You dropped your head, trying not to let his words affect you. He was angry and Miyuki never spared his words much thought when he was angry. You certainly deserved his ire, anyhow. Youâd been such a shitty friend.
You took a deep breath. âNot really. I know I havenât been a good friend to you. I just thought . . . I donât know. I thought you deserved to finally hear an explanation from me, but like I said before, it . . . might not be something you want to hear.â
Miyuki didnât say anything else, turning to look at the window. You took that as your cue to continue, dragging a chair over to his bedside. You managed a reasonable distance away from the bed, dropping your bag onto the floor with a sigh.
âItâs taken far too long for me to explain myself. I understand if, even if you know, youâll want to go our separate ways, though my explanation sort of ensures that you probably wonât want to talk to me, anyways.â You glanced up at him and he was still looking out the window, but his eyebrows were furrowed now. He was troubled.
You pushed on, dropping your eyes to your lap. âMy reasons werenât entirely for educational purposes, but I think youâve picked up on that already, right? It was . . . Well, it was partially because of my sisterâs advice, I guess. She didnât say to leave because of you or anything, just that I had to prioritize my education when it came to picking a high school.â
Youâd raised your eyes to his face and saw him raise his shoulders, the furrow of his eyebrows deepening in a way that told you he was ready to protest. You continued speaking before he could. âSeido is a great school. Looking back on it now, it probably wouldâve benefitted me as much as Mimayama has. Plus,â you dropped your eyes back to your lap. âYou wouldâve been there, too.â
âWhatâs your point?â
You flinched at the sharpness of his voice. It cut deeply, making you feel small and insignificant. Still, you ventured further.
âThat was the problem,â you mumbled. âYouâd be there and Iâd be with you. She â my sister â said not to let my feelings influence my decision. At this point, Iâve clearly missed the mark that she was aiming for. I just,â you paused, leaning forward to brace your elbows on your knees, rubbing your forehead tiredly. Your heart felt like it was going to break free from your ribs.
âI wanted to go to Seido with you. But if I did, I wouldâve picked that school because I was in love with you. So, I went to Mimayama because I thought that by leaving, I could get rid of these feelings and we could continue to be friends.â
Finally saying it felt so relieving, like the pressure on your chest had lifted and you could breathe freely. The constraints of your secret were gone. But that left you to deal with the aftermath.
You didnât raise your head as the silence seemed to echo, broken only by the occasional voice outside the room and the ticking of the clock. Miyuki still hadnât said anything.
Your liberation ended with the cold revelation that no, he didnât feel the same and youâd ruined your friendship permanently.
You squeezed your eyes shut, feeling a few tears slid down your cheek. You rubbed them away roughly, though fresh ones replaced them immediately. Your chest and throat felt constricted, making breathing steadily a little difficult. You heard the sheets rustle as he moved.
âWhy are you crying?â Did your ears betray you or had his voice softened? He still sounded tired as hell, but he didnât sound irritated. If anything, his tone was almost exasperated.
You brushed away the fresh set of tears but they just kept coming. Was this two years of pent-up frustration coming to the surface? Or was it because of the imminent end of your friendship?
âI just ruined my friendship,â you muttered, sniffling. It didnât look like your tears would be stopping anytime soon, so you decided to save yourself the embarrassment; you stood up then grabbed your bag and stood up quickly, covering your face with your arm. âIâm sorry. I shouldnât have â â
âWait,â he called quickly. You stepped back as you heard the hospital bed creak then a soft âfuckâ reached your ears, making you drop your arm away from your eyes.
Your eyes widened once you saw he had sat up and shifted, moving to stand up in front of you. âDonât get up, youâll hurt yourself more!â You put a hand on his shoulder, trying pushing him down, but it was all in vain. The strength he had gained over the years â and more recently as the cleanup for Seido â was no match for your own. He stood up and you found yourself trapped with him in the space between the chair and the bed.
You froze. With this proximity, you could lean your forehead on his chest; in fact, you could almost feel the warmth he radiated. You dropped your eyes immediately. Funnily enough, your tears were quickly drying with this new distraction.
Miyuki pried your fingers off his shoulder and your heart fell to your stomach, but instead of dropping your hand, he clasped your hand between his own. His grip was tight and unyielding. The message was clear. You werenât going anywhere.
(And to be completely honest, you didnât want to be anywhere else.)
You saw his chest lift and fall as he sighed, the warm air brushing over the crown of your head, tickling stray pieces of flyaway hair. There were too many things going on at once. You felt the coarseness of his palms against your hand, callouses rubbing against the skin roughly, the distinct scent of a generic detergent brand printed on the cotton t-shirt he was wearing. But it was all so Miyuki that you couldnât complain.
Being this close, hearing his steady breathing, he was here. That familiar comfort youâd always found with him was slowly returning and that was dangerous. You didnât even know if he still wanted to be your friend. But maybe . . .
âYouâre right,â he finally said.
âAbout what?â
âAbout ruining our friendship.â
You flinched, taking a step back and running into the chair. It scraped loudly against the floor. Well, then. At least that had been solved, right? You felt the tears that had dried begin to well up again, the hurt piercing your heart like a knife once more. You tried to pull your hand away but he was too strong for you.
âMiyuki â â
âI donât want to be your friend if you feel like that.â
Your mouth quivered. âI get it, you donât need to â â
He released your hand but before you could step away, his hands were cradling your face, tilting you towards him. You had no choice but to look at him. You inhaled sharply, feeling exposed underneath his gaze. But more than that, his eyes held an unspoken tenderness that hadnât been there before. His thumbs gently brushed away the stray tears that had escaped.
âIâm not . . . good with this,â he said. âBut I donât want to be your friend because I â â He stopped, almost seeming to pout at his lack of articulation. You had an inkling to what he was trying to say, to what he was hinting at and it made your chest tighten, made your palms sweaty and your heart race.
âWhy?â you blurted out, feeling like you had to know why he would chose you, out of all people, and also because you werenât sure you could deal with the implications of his words so soon.
Miyuki looked genuinely confused. âWhat?â
âAfter all I did . . . Not talking to you . . . Honestly, I understand why you blocked me â â
âBlocked you? I never blocked you,â he frowned.
âI â Your number didnât work when I tried to text you for your birthday last year,â you clarified. âNo call, either.â
âOh. Oh.â He seemed to understand and winced, a guilty expression passing over his face. âI got a new phone a few days before that. I broke my old one â â
âHow do you break a Nokia?â
He grinned, tugging on your cheek playfully and your heart skipped a beat at the sight of his grin, so warm and full of mirth. You felt like a little thirteen-year-old again, experiencing the first adrenaline rush of your feelings.
âMy teammates broke it,â he corrected. âDad got me one, said it was partially a birthday present, too. I got a new phone number but I . . . Well, I never texted you my new number. I had yours, I just didnât . . .â he trailed off and the happy bubble you two had found yourselves in popped.
It hurt, but you understood. Miyuki was the type to need to know â he needed to know why you had avoided telling him for so long, why you wanted to go all the way to Kyoto for school; he was analytical in every aspect of his life. You werenât going to be excluded from that particular quirk.
But you also wondered what would happen now. If his terrible word phrasing from earlier said anything about it, Miyuki seemed to think of you as more than a friend â but it had been two years since you two had spoken or even interacted face-to-face.
âHey.â
You blinked, refocusing on him. He was frowning, eyebrows furrowed as he squished your cheeks together. You struggled in his grip, feeling a scowl quickly form on your lips. âYour hands are probably filthy, stop that â â
He sighed and dropped his hands from your face, stepping back to lean on the hospital bed fully. You were . . . disappointed at the ensuring distance, no longer finding his natural warmth at your disposal. You chided yourself; Miyuki had an injury. He shouldnât exert so much energy. You werenât sure about the extent of his injury, exactly, but if he had fainted from the pain, then it had to be worrying, right?
You scrutinized his appearance, too caught up in your worries to be shameful. At least that was one thing that never changed. (And would probably never change.)
âYou should sit back down, Miyuki.â
Miyuki huffed softly. âItâs just an oblique muscle tear on my right side. And Iâm not made of glass, you know.â
âI know.â
âAnd hey,â he caught your attention again. âWhy do you always call me by my last name? Even Mei calls me by my first.â
You shrugged, shifting uncomfortably at the sudden question. âI donât know. It was just a thing I always did. Besides, this is Mei weâre talking about.â
He snorted. âThatâs true. Wait,â he frowned at you. âSince when do you call Mei by his first name? This is just unfair.â He pouted a little and you huffed.
âIâm relieved to see that you havenât changed, and well, weâve sort of . . . become friends.â
âYou know we lost our ticket to Nationals because of Inashiro, right?â
You rolled your eyes. âWell, youâre going to Koshien Stadium now, arenât you? Itâs basically the same thing.â
âItâs not.â
âMei and I are friends, I guess. He was the one who encouraged me to â to talk to you. Try and rekindle our friendship.â
âWhat exactly did he say?â
You pursed your lips, narrowing your eyes at Miyuki. âWhy do you want to know?â
Miyuki shrugged carelessly. âMeiâs the type to incite action in someone else. Would you have come if you hadnât spoken to him?â
You made a choked sound of disbelief. âYouâre assuming â â
âYou said you were in love with me, didnât you?â
The abrupt reminder of your confession was like a slap to the face. You shut your mouth silently, feeling embarrassed at being put on the spot like this.
Miyuki looked thoughtful. âWhatever he said mustâve resonated with you. I imagine your sister had a hand in this, too. She doesnât like taking the blame, does she?â
You were worried about nothing, apparently. Miyuki seemed to remember all your ticks now as he had two years ago. In fact, just being with him for these past few minutes have been refreshing. It was like coming home.
Miyuki huffed softly at your lack of response. âLook, I . . . Iâm sorry. For everything.â
You stiffened. âWhat are you â â
He says your name lowly, cutting you off short.
There was an edge of rawness in his voice, a vulnerability that you hadnât ever heard before. You swallowed your response, watching him tentatively as he dropped his head, turning his eyes to the ground.
âThese last few months were difficult. Did you know I was made captain? The, uh, previous captain â Yuki â nominated me, of all people. You know how I am. As you might imagine, we had a few clashes, but things are coming together now. I mean, we won. Can you believe that?â Miyuki laughed, but it was cold and brittle.
You didnât like how depreciating this was turning. He mayâve asked for your silence, but if all he was going to do was put himself down, then you would put a stop to it.
As if sensing your climbing ire, he looked back up and the anger simmered, fading to a dull roar as you met his eyes. There was a warmth in there you hadnât ever seen before.
âWe got through it. Weâre here now. Things are looking up. This damn injury . . . Itâs just a speed bump in a long road. But through it all, I kept going back to you. You never left my mind. I,â he paused again and dropped his eyes, seemingly embarrassed, âI missed you.â It came out like a mumble, a hesitant admission; expected for someone as emotionally closed off as Miyuki.
But you found it charming. His inability to respond in closely social situations, in times like this that were intimate. You knew him well enough to know what he was saying.
âSo, Iâm sorry. For ignoring you. For prying when it wasnât my place. For being an asshole about it all, really.â
You took a deep breath. This was it. âIâm sorry, too. No matter what, you deserved to know the truth.â
âWell.â It sounded like Miyuki disagreed as he reached up to rub the back of his neck sheepishly. âIt was a deeply personal reason.â
You snorted. âNo shit.â
âIf itâs any consolation, Iâve always felt the same.â
You froze.
There it was.
Your heart was going into overdrive once again and you found your breath stolen from you when he lifted his head to make eye contact with you. There was still that warmth in there that hadnât been present before. But maybe it had always been there, you had just never seen it. Miyuki was a master at disguising his emotions and you supposed you couldnât ever have idealized the concept of him having feelings for you to be able to actually notice it.
âAnd I think,â he continued quietly, âthat weâre not ever going to be the same again. But thatâs okay. So, letâs start off with you calling me by my first name, yeah?â
The air left your lungs in a rush and before you could even think to manage an agreement, he lifted his hand to your cheek, settling warmly on the curve, thumb brushing gently over it. He pushed forward and you knew, you knew where this was heading. You didnât stop him. You werenât sure you wanted to. Sure, there mightâve been some things that still needed to be discussed but you had settled your battles for the most part.
So when he asked, his voice soft in the tenderness of the moment, âCan I kiss you?â You found it a little hard to keep standing straight, so why wouldnât you have leaned forward on him â totally mindful of his injury, of course â and met his lips halfway.
There mightâve been a number of things that ruined it for anyone else â having to watch his right side constantly so you didnât hurt him, the bookbag still weighing heavily on your shoulder, keeping an ear out for the nurses and doctors â but there were other factors that made it perfect for you.
The warm and firm press of his mouth on yours, easily consuming all your senses with everything that was Miyuki Kazuya but retaining a gentleness that was also him. Always making sure you were comfortable. And the way his other hand had easily fallen to your waist to keep you in place was your anchor, powerful tendons of his arm underneath your palm that kept you from falling into the sea.
It was strange. He was both all-consuming and anchoring.
He shifted, angling a little more to slant his lips over yours, deepening and taking you down to the depths of the ocean. You followed willingly, reciprocating eagerly if only to prolong this experience. But the growing burn in your lungs was going to be a problem soon.
That was okay. He was back in your life now, wasnât he? Miyuki Kazuya wasnât a stranger, he wasnât a friend; he was something more, a fixated presence in your life that caused you both immense happiness and irritation. No one was perfect, you knew, but even with all his faults and flaws, he came pretty damn close.
And he was right, too.
You had sort of ruined your friendship, though you supposed it was on his end, too. This was a two-way street, after all.
But as he pulled away, breathing a little faster than usual, his lips beginning to swell, you didnât find yourself mourning the end of it. No, as he caught his breath and leaned forward again to claim your mouth, you found yourself looking forward to what heâd bring.
Your future was firmly entrenched with his and you wanted it to stay that way.
#fair warning i wrote this when i was in my. sophomore year. in 2019. LOL#its not bad! im actually quite fond of this fic#particularly of my characterizations. mei especially. he grew on me while writing it#its been up on ao3 since 2019 i just thought that since i'm posting dogfish here#i might as well throw up my other oneshots#the shorter content basically. long stuff will be posted strictly to ao3 or wattpad#daiya no ace x reader#daiya no ace#ace of diamond#ace of diamond x reader#miyuki kazuya#miyuki kazuya x reader#miyuki#moss writes
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Idia Drabble thatâs been cooking too long in my drafts.
Warnings: none tbh. Reader doesnât have gender specified.
Suddenly, the door slams open, and you scream, breaking the biscuit you were holding in half.
There, at the entrance to the Ramshackle Dormhouse, stands Idia, clad in his pajamas. His face is heavily flushed, the tips of his hair flickering red- timed with his heavy breathing.
You stare at him, the broken biscuit still in your hands, crumbs still decorating the floor. Thereâs a long silence stretched out along the Ramshackle dorm, filled only by the creaking of the chair against the floorboards- probably the ghosts. âDo you⌠need somethingâŚ?â You manage to finally get out.
The red on Idiaâs hair comes to a halt, stuck in the same place- as if frozen in time- just like his breathing. His lips close, eyebrows tilting downwards- is he angry? The red, turning to pink, in his hair inches up, almost reaching to his scalp-
He slams the door, leaving you alone in the dorm.
ââŚwell damn.â You take a bite of your biscuit.
#moss writes#Twisted Wonderland#Twisted Wonderland x reader#twst#twst x reader#Idia#Idia x reader#Idia Shroud#Idia Shroud x reader
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I wrote Jackson's Diary fanfiction, very scary
Anyway here's the link :]
#jackson's diary#dexer#i dont have a faniction tag oh god#uhhhh#moss writes#thats so boring but it will do for now
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SO STORY UPDATE AND SHIT
âWhy didnât you tell me you were out. I could of asked Doc or Zed to somehow make a replacement for your ADHD medsâŚ.ok maybe just Zed. Iâm pretty sure heâs made EX his testosterone for his shots.â
Zed seems to be the type of person to make stuff illegally. Heâs the servers go to guy besides Doc for the making of their medication and stuff when they canât get it anywhere else an
#hermitblr#hermitcraft#tangotek#jimmy solidarity#<âimplied to be him#team rancher au#zedaph#docm77#evil xisuma#Moss Writes
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Veiltober day 4 - Lucanis
Name: Leo Mahariel Pronouns: He/Him Race/Class: Elven Veilranger Faction: The Gray Wardens Background: One of the former Heroes of Fereldan, joined with a spirit of Sorrow, now looped back into saving the world from the Blight.
Sorrow and Spite are like oil and water.Â
Leo watches the purple apparition circle the ghostly remembrance of Tamlen, who tries its best to avoid eye contact. As always, the tears that spill unceasing from Sorrowâs eyes disappear as they fall from its cheeks, but Spriteâs prodding has made them flow fast and hot.Â
âYour elgar is harassing mine,â Leo says, knocking his knee into Lucanisâs thigh. The two men are sitting together in the library while the others rest.Â
The antivan looks up from his book, frowning, at the conflict in question. âSpite, contain yourself. Sorrow is miserable enough.âÂ
The demon snarls at its host, but a pointed glare from both men sends him prowling away. He fades through the wall and off into some other part of the Lighthouse, giving the remaining three a change to sigh.Â
âI dislike that spirit.â Sorrow crouches, folding in on itself.Â
âYou and me both.â Lucanis says under his breath, shaking his head.
Leo tucks his thumb between the pages of his book and lets it fall closed as he looks over the spirit. It seems fine, aside from how odd it still is for him to see it so solid and physical in a space.Â
âYouâll be alright, Abelas.â The elf leans back and sets his book back on his knees. He looks sidelong at his companion. âAnd so will you, Lucanis.âÂ
Embarrassment passes over the manâs face for a moment, as if he hadnât been expecting his words to be heard. He attempts to smooth it over with a cough, returning his dark gaze to the pages of his book, but Leo takes the opportunity to study his face. His cheeks are brushed pink, traveling down his neck and he absently runs the thumb of his free hand against the pads of his fingertips.Â
He does motions like that a lot, flexing his hands or pressing his fingers together. At first glance it seems like any normal stretch a seasoned assassin might do, but Leo canât help but wonder if thereâs something else to it. A reminder of how his own skin feels stretched over his bones after everything heâs been through.Â
Lucanis catches him looking and Leo holds his gaze. The manâs eyes are intense even without him trying, and Leo might have flinched away had the two met years ago. He was older now, though, not so quick to crack beneath the stare of an attractive man.Â
Lucanis breaks the silence first. âWhat does âabelasâ mean?â
âIt means âsorrowâ. I have been away from my clan, and other Dalish, for many years.â Aside from Bellara and Davrin, now. The two younger Dalish have been a breath of fresh air, despite their high energy keeping him on his toes.âI try to keep my elvish in tact by naming those close to me. Sorrow is abelas, Morrigan is ma vehnan, and youâŚâÂ
He tries to think of something to call Lucanis in Elvish, something personal. It would be easy to label him Mi or Din'an, but Leo will not reduce him to a weapon. He is more than death, more than spite, more than just a crow. Leo is more than just a warden, more than his bow, and more than sorrow.Â
âMirthadra.â Leo decides. âHonored.âÂ
#If u saw me post this to the wrong account no u DIDNT#Well#I still stand by not liking this one very much#and also that Leo is bisexual#Moss writes#veiltober#The Aus are starting to AU so please dont expect a definitive canon from me
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Hello, Good Omens Fandom!!
Were you a victim of season 2? Do you need comfort in the form of smut in these trying times? Then have I got the fic for you!
I Want You (For Worse Or For Better) is an Omegaverse vignette series set throughout the course of human history focusing on Aziraphale and Crowley's smutty encounters that Totally Happened. The first chapter is up and available to be read now (yes, you hear me, right now!!), and will soon be joined by about ten more. I am currently accepting suggestions for any favorite eras, or desired scenes on AO3, through my DMs and askbox, or in the comments and reblogs on this post. If you put it in the tags I am not guaranteed to see it.
Link will be followed by a list of what's up next for this vignette series!
ALRIGHT, SO! The list of planned (or posted) eras are as follows:
Mesopotamia (posted)
Bildad era (under construction)
Golgotha (planned)
Roman Empire (planned)
11th Century England (planned)
The Bastille (planned)
Edinburgh, 1827 (planned)
London, 1941 (planned)
Woodstock, 1969 (planned)
Dowling Estate, year undecided (planned)
Mayfair, London, 2019, immediately post-Amagedon (planned)
Soho, London, 2021, post-lockdown (planned)
Post s2- location undecided, will be angsty (planned)
#good omens#good omens fanfiction#good omens fanfic#good omens fic#fanfic#ao3 fanfic#moss writes#this will be my pinned post so yall can find it
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HOLA ITS ME AGAIN-
Making out with revivebur-
Thatâs it.
okay now this i can do ;)
revivebur is the same as wilbur. you know this. just your average, psychopathic, former president. the man you had served through countless battles and never saw as anything more than a good friend.
so why is he so goddamn hot?
maybe it was how roughed up he was, or the smell of cigarette smoke he now seemed to carry with him, or maybe even the trench coat that was folded over his arms, which of course were showing due to the rolled up sleeves of his button down. always those fucking button downs....
so.. how did you end up pinned against a wall of his stupid burger van with his gorgeous lips against yours?
quite easily really, all he had to do was say your name with that authoritative tone and you were already dumbed down. he took note of that immediately of course, softly cooing at you sweetly and luring you into the van before roughly slamming the door shut and shoving you up against the nearest surface. he kissed you with a hunger more intense than anything you had ever seen, which seemed fair considering he's been deprived for thirteen and a half years.
he takes his time at first, simply enjoying the way your lips feel on his. he could do this for hours, gripping your waist and pushing himself against you every so often. It's too bad that he's just too desperate.
"So pretty and all for me, right darling? Yeah? All fucked out and I've barely even touched you, gods you're pathetic," he breathes, harshly pressing his lips against yours, his long fingers wrapping themselves around your neck and squeezing. when you gasp into him he takes advantage and invades your mouth with his tongue. he fucking adores the sounds that pour out of you, so much so he doesn't even realize that his hips are twitching and bucking against yours.
how unfortunate that humans need oxygen, but of course as he pulls away he bites your lower lip, relishing the whine you let out, drawing blood and licking it up before he moves his attention to your neck.
"Well, look at that, it appears there is empty space here. We've got to do something about that, wouldn't you agree, my love? cant have you walking around without everyone knowing that you're mine." the smirk on his face is smug and his tone condescending as he coos, "Oh but don't worry, dear. I have all night."
#mosslovestherain#moss writes#moss answers <3#lillyyyyyyy my love#wilbur soot#wilbur soot x reader#wilbur soot x you#wilbur x reader#wilbur x you#revivebur#how do i tag things#im not the best at this lmfao#and wil ofc
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this fic has me doing everything: looking at useless words I will not end up using, math, thinking about Gwaine's boobs... no wonder I am so slow!!!
#math at 1.30 am can be a bit daunting XD#I need to far tornate i conti perchè se ho cannato le età salta tutto#moss text#moss writes
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Autumn Tea Chapter 6
Lockwood & Co.đ¸Historical AUđ¸Locklyle
983 words
Chapter 5 , Chapter 7
Part One
Despite the lovely dress Mr. Lockwood had given her, Lucy still felt entirely out of place at the banquet. He had told her to just stay close, but now she felt much more like a shadow than a person. They were right outside the banquet hall, and Lucy tried one more attempt to leave.
âMr. Lockwood, I really think I should stay at the house,â she whispered to him.
âNonsense. You look lovely,â he smiled, âBesides that, you make a wonderful emotional support.â He linked their arms and strided through the doors. Lucy tried her best not to stumble as she followed.
âJust stay calm. You belong here.â He leaned down to her ear and whispered a final encouragement.
Part Two
Quill Kipps couldnât quite believe his eyes when he saw one Anthony Lockwood come into the banquet with a woman who was most certainly not George Cubbins.
Immediately, he knew he had to introduce himself.
âTony!â
The woman jumped at the yell, and Kipps noticed Lockwoodâs arm tightened around hers before turning toward him.
âKipps!â he smiled, âHow do you do?â
âVery well. Whoâs this?â
âThis,â Lockwood glanced down at her, and she looked up at him nervously, âis Ms. Lucy Carlyle. Sheâs Georgeâs cousin. He recommended I come with her as heâs fallen ill.â
Ms. Lucy for some reason looked very confused.
âHow terrible.â
âQuite.â
They continued to stare each other down for a minute as Ms. Lucy glanced between them.
âMr. Lockwood,â she finally broke the silence, âwhoâs this?â
âAh, this is-â
âQuill Kipps,â he interrupted and held out his hand for hers. She startled before shaking it. Perturbed, he shaked back. She had a very strong grip.
âYes,â Lockwood continued, âheâs the Manager of Communications at Fittes.â
âAnd Iâm delighted to meet you,â he smirked in a way that made his eyes squint. He was quite curious about her. This Lucy Carlyle had the clothes of a lady, but the grip of a man, and he wanted to know just where she had gotten it.
âWell, Iâm afraid I must be going now, but Iâd be delighted to talk with you again, Ms. Carlyle.â
âTake care, sir,â she said.
âGoodbye, Kipps,â Lockwood said after.
Quill left to greet another newcomer, wondering if he recalled George ever mentioning a cousin in his long-winded ramblings.
Part Three
âGood riddance,â Anthony muttered to himself.
âAre you two not on friendly terms?â Lucy asked him, and Anthony began chuckling.
âOnly if you want to punch your friendâs face whenever you see it.â
âI donât know⌠his face seemed much more slappable than punchable. Perhaps because of the longness of itâŚâ
He threw his head back to laugh, and saw Lucy begin to snicker as well.
âAs fun as it would be,â he started as he calmed down, âletâs not test that theory. Fittes is a good company partner to have.â
âOf course, Mr. Lockwood.â
Part Four
The rest of the banquet was dreadfully boring. Lucy truly did feel like merely a shadow to Mr. Lockwood. She followed him around as he made pleasant conversation with company heads and independent merchants. The legal jargon interspersed with their talks of sandwiches and the weekâs weather made her head spin.
She was very happy once it was over.
The night air was refreshing, and it seemed to have slightly drizzled as the stones on the pavement had a wet sheen that reflected the moonlight. She and Mr. Lockwood stood on the side of the road outside the banquet hall, waiting for their carriage to take them to the townhouse.
âSo, how did you like it?â Mr Lockwood turned to her to ask.
âDreadfully boring.â
âIt is, isnât it?â he grinned, and the moonlight glinted off his teeth like the stones on the pavement. Lucy felt her face grow warm despite the cold and looked away.
âThere it is,â Mr. Lockwood looked down the street where the carriage approached, and Lucy felt her face cool as his grin turned away from her.
The townhouse they were staying at put Lucy into a bit of a shock. Her room was bigger than her entire house up north, and she felt like quite a noblewoman sitting on the soft, intricately carved bed.
âIâll have to tell Mary about this,â she grinned to herself, âsuch a large bed for one person. Sheâll find it very entertaining.â
She looked over to her bedside table, and saw a small black box that seemed out of place amongst the purposefully placed decor. Thinking it perhaps would be another silly custom of rich people she could write Mary, and partly for her own curiosity, she took it into her palm and opened it.
Inside sat a very familiar necklace.
Part Five
There were three purposeful knocks on the door, and Anthony had a feeling she had found his gift.
He was hoping she would simply find it, wear it the next day, and not say anything about it, but perhaps that was asking for too much.
Tentatively, he opened the door to reveal Lucy still in her dress from the banquet, red-faced, and clutching the delicate necklace.
âIs thisâŚâ she held it up to him, âfor me?â
He couldnât help but grin. She looked so delightful when flustered.
âI noticed you looking at it in the window earlier today. Donât you like it?â he tilted his head.
âWell yes, butâŚâ she stuttered, âI just⌠It mustâve been-â
âItâs a present,â he interrupted her, âThink of it as a thank you for putting up with my antics.â
âOh but, Mr. Lockwood.â
âYes?â he took half a step towards her, and she looked up at him.
âIâve never put on a necklace before.â
And perhaps Anthony Lockwood is a very selfish man. In fact, he knows he is. Because his heart stuttered in excitement as he said,
âI can put it on for you.â
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like the part of the song where it falls masterlist
pairing: miyuki kazuya x f!reader
In which you get hit by Miyuki Kazuya's winning home-run of the World Series and things get a little⌠weird.
full summary: It is just your luck that you get knocked out (and consequently concussed) by the winning home-run of the World Series.
Bottom of the ninth, the sky dark, the floodlights on, the atmosphere of Petco Park absolutely electric.
Youâre just trying to get a good shot of the field with your camera and then boom.
Baseball, meet face.
But the San Diego Padres won at least, right? That home-run broke the 4-4 tie. Their first World Series win ever and their first World Series appearance since, like, the 80s or something.
In no small part due to their trailblazer of a catcher, a foreign player, actually, the only Japanese starting catcher in the Majors currently â Miyuki Kazuya.
Good for them. Good for him!
Even if he is the guy to (technically) blame for concussing you.
contains: meet-ugly, mutual pining, light angst, not actually unrequited love
ao3 | wattpad | fic playlist | story tag | kazuya x reader tag
âžď¸ chapter index
part one. rough as a thousand sharpened nails
part two. like a hinge, like a wing, like the part of the song where it falls
part three. also i wanted to be able to love. and we all know how that one goes, donât we?
part four. mostly, i want to be kind
part five. and probably, if they donât waste time looking for an easier world, they can do it
part six. dogfish
#dgfh**#moss writes#miyuki kazuya#miyuki kazuya x reader#miyuki x reader#daiya no ace#ace of diamond#daiya no ace x reader#yet another indulgent fic#i had a lot of fun with it. i think its fun. i am posting so maybe. u all can also enjoy it
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I finished Wandererâs interlude quest and now I want to give him the comfort he deserves so have this shitty Drabble I cooked up at 10:50 pm.
Uhhh this might be ooc but again- I just wanna give my boy some comfort
Uhhh can be read as platonic or romantic idrc
Oh also there are Genshin spoilers for Scaramoucheâs backstory
He exposed his whole heart to you.
Everything, from his creation as a puppet to his birth as a god was spilled out, the story stretching out like paint on dried paper.
You stare at the anemo user in front of you as he gasps for air, each breath as pained and anguished as the last. His face is pained with tears, some of the liquid falling into the mouth. The eyes carved from his mother are wide open, pupils shaking like his hands.
Without thinking, you cup his cheeks with my palms, turning him to yourself to stare at his eyes.
So blue, like the ocean stretching all across Fontaine. Inside them is nothing but pain and hurt, concealed by anger. You can tell he wants to hurl an insult to you, but all he can get out is a simple âHh.â The Wandererâs face comforts into an even more pained one, gasps for air becoming even more strained. He closes the storm-filled eyes, and sobs. It wracks his body, making it violently shake with each noise. However, he manages to perfectly keep his head in your hands.
Wordlessly, you pull him into a hug, resting his head in the crook of your neck. In response, as if it was instinct, his hands come up to grip at your clothes, harshly pulling at them. His legs wrap around your body, pulling yourself impossibly closer to him. Mixed up syllables and words come out at a poor attempt of speaking, none of the words comprehensible.
For awhile, until a brush has painted the sky black and then blue again, the both of you stay in that position.
#Genshin#Genshin x reader#Genshin Impact#Genshin Impact x reader#Scaramouche#Scaramouche x reader#Wanderer#Wanderer x reader#moss writes
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remember to tag your asks to me with "moss ask" (or otherwise addressed to me) or else smores will answer them because hes faster than me at this
anyways none of you have gotten close to guessing who i kin yet =3
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