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𝜗𝜚˚⋆ teachers pet ft. jjk men
an: hi all! i was inspired by listening to k-12 (for like the umpteenth time)
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g.s - subject: history
satoru gojo, or commonly referred to as ‘gojo-sensei’ hardly ever taught. showing up late to classes late with his shades on, leaning back in his chair, and letting his classes do whatever they wanted while he ate sweets the entire damn time. yet, miraculously, a student has never failed his class.
being the only quiet one in your class with remarkable grades, gojo-sensei always came to you for help. “y/n, you’re my only hope,” he’d dramatically exclaim, dropping a stack of papers on your desk. “grade these for me? i swear i’ll give you volunteer hours.” you wanted to decline but you needed the hours honestly since you weren’t in any clubs.
sighing, you take them, “i’m not sure this is even legal.” you murmur.
“it’s not illegal either.” gojo-sensei says, pointing finger guns you’re way. “besides, i need a teachers pet to help keep me in check.” you roll your eyes but grade the papers, ignoring the way his bright azure colored eyes linger on you over the rim of his shades.
g.s - subject: literature
geto-sensei was loved by all students, especially the girls. his long hair, clean look and strong build, he was quite a few of some schoolgirls crushes. but everyone knew just how terrifying he could be when he felt as if someone disrespected literature.
“you didn’t read the book?” he tuts, rubbing his temples, “how disappointing.”
he looks your way, smiling gently, “y/n.” he calls, “would you care to share your thoughts on the symbolism?” you beam and begin chattering away, feeling a tad bit smug. the class groans because everyone knew, how couldn’t anyone when it was so obvious, that you were the favorite.
once the bell rings and the class disperses, you get ready to join your peers to the next class period when he hands you a book. “i think you’d like this one.” his long fingers brush against yours, and for a moment, you swear he’s looking at you differently.
n.k - subject: math
nanami-sensei was a strict, no nonsense man. no phones, no talking, and definitely no excuses.
except for you that is.
“sensei? i forgot my homework.” a student would whine. looking over his glasses before pushing them up, “you get an f.” he’d cooly reply.
“i forgot mine too..” you’d mumble from your seat. he sighs, “make sure you bring it in tomorrow.” and the whole class erupts in protests. “no fair nanami-sensei! that’s just blatant favoritism!” someone shouted.
nanami pushes up his glasses and looks at you. “y/n is a diligent student. unlike the rest of you.” the sounds of your classmates blurs into the background as you lock gazes with him.
the way he says your name and holds your gaze sends shivers down your spine.
f.t - subject: p.e
toji-sensei didn’t do much, just like every other physical education teacher. he sits on the bleachers while the class runs laps.
but when you run by during one of your laps, he suddenly perks up.
“y/n, you’re slacking,” he teases, smirking. shooting him a look, “i’m quite frankly, literally dying.” you pant.
chuckling, he’d wave you over. “come sit with me.” you collapse next to him, and he tosses you his water bottle. “don’t tell the others.” the rest of the class glares, you’re the only one who gets away with skipping laps—and they all know why.
your fingers graze against toji’s but neither of you make an attempt to move but do hide the touch from any lurking eyes.
s.r - subject: biology (idk man bc of his infatuation with cutting things open)
nobody knows how sukuna-sensei is allowed to teach or why they still let him. he insults his students, curses like a sailor and his grading system made no sense.
“sukuna-sensei?” his name is called from across the room, “why’d i get a 72 percent?” a classmate asked.
with a deadpan face, “i don’t like your fucking face.” sukuna-sensei responded.
meanwhile, your papers were always an 100, even though biology was not your strong suit. “perfect grade once again, miss goody two shoes.” he’d say as he passes your paper to you with a smirk.
you’d lift your head to glare at him, “i’ve asked you to stop calling me that.”
he leans in, his breath hitting your ear, “make me.”
your face burns, and you look away. a dark chuckle emerging from him as he walks around passing out the rest of the papers.
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idk just felt like i needed to post something, should i do a pt 2 with other characters?? lmk ^_^
#jjk x yn#jjk toji#jjk sukuna#jjk nanami#jjk geto#jjk gojo#jjk x reader#jjk#teacher x reader#teacher x student#ᥫ᭡.amorienomore#jujustsu kaisen x reader#jujutsu nanami#jujutsu gojo#jujutsu geto#jujutsu toji#jujutsu sukuna#gojo x reader#nanami x reader#geto x reader#toji x reader#sukuna x reader#fem!reader#jjk gojo x reader#jjk nanami x reader#jjk geto x reader#jjk toji x reader#jjk sukuna x reader
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WHEN I SAY THIS DEAD MADE ME CRY LIKE HELLO????

wildflower— nanami kento.
Your breath caught in your throat. “I—” “Do you have any idea how brilliant you are?” His voice was trembling now, thick with emotion. “You were always the smartest person in the room. You deserved to get out of here….to have everything you ever dreamed of. And instead… you stayed. You gave it all up. Why?” Tears burned the back of your eyes. “Because I didn’t have a choice, Kento.” “Yes, you did.” His voice cracked. “You could have told me. You could have called me. I would’ve—” “You would’ve what, Kento?” you choked. “Fixed my life for me? Paid my bills? Dragged me to Tokyo and pretended like I belonged in your world?” His jaw clenched. “You do belong in my world.”
GENRE: alternate universe - actor/s au!;
WARNING/S: afab! reader, use of she/her pronouns, romance, fluff, angst, hurt/comfort, hurt, love, fluff, humor, light-hearted, long-term relationship, marriage, loss, emotional distress, hatred, resentment, domestic, confessions, getting together, friends, slice of life, childhood friends, distress, cheating, falling out of love, toxic relationship, drama, depression, bitterness, grief, trauma, pregnancy, explicit birthing scene, illness, post-partum depression, bodily fluids, children, therapy, explicit depiction of birthing, depiction of bodily fluids, depiction of post-partum depression, mention of blood, mention of birthing, mention of bodily fluids, mention of depression, actor! nanami, housewife! reader;
WORD COUNT: 18k words
NOTE: this took a while and im a bit sick all the sudden but i realized i have to put this out so i just decided to go on and post this. anyway, i hope you enjoy this. ready the tissue for this, its a crier. i love you all so much <3
masterlist
if you want to, tip!
the good life ― masterlist.
IT WAS HARD NOT TO KNOW WHAT EVERYTHING MEANS AFTER TWENTY YEARS OF MARRIAGE. After all that time, wouldn’t you know much about the person you were married to? This moment was not an exemption, of course. You were his wife, you knew everything about him. You just had to know.
So, as you stood there, looking at him, you knew that look. That look in Kento's caramel eyes as he’s putting on his suit. The quiet resignation. The practiced ease of sliding the tie around his neck, smoothing down his shirt, adjusting the cufflinks. Like a man preparing to go to war — except it isn’t war. It’s something worse. You knew that much.
You hum softly, curled up on the couch, and watch him from across the room. He doesn’t notice you at first, too focused on making himself presentable. Like it matters. Like any of it matters. You know where he’s going. You’ve always known.
It’s something you never said out loud, not in the past twenty years, not when the nights stretched long and lonely, not when his touch began to feel like an apology instead of love. You haven’t said a word, and he hasn’t either.
But you know all about it already.
There was no need for such words.
There was no need for anything else.
You know because when he turns around, there’s that smile all over again. That smile you fell in love with all those years ago. It was that loving, gentle smile. Strained by the weariness, the tired, and the painfully distant bitterness that dwelled over time on his face.
And then besides that, he lies.
He always has to know how to lie.
He was an actor by trade, after all.
"I’ll be home late, baby." he says like it means nothing, like it’s any other day. His voice doesn’t crack. His eyes don’t betray him. But you see it. You always do. And it kills you a little more each time.
You know he loves you. It’s never been a question of love. It’s always been a question of truth. And the truth is, love doesn’t stop him from leaving. The truth is, love doesn’t make him stay. The truth is, he’s already gone before he’s out the door.
And sometimes you want to kill him for it. Even if you don’t want to, you think about it often. You think about wanting to just be angry and let yourself loose into the madness of it all. You wanted to go and have something for yourself. Even if that was a life, even if it was his life. After all that you had suffered and endured, don’t you deserve it? Don’t you deserve to take his life?
For the silence. For the way he pretends. For the way you let him. For the way you can’t bring yourself to break it all apart because maybe —just maybe— if you keep pretending, too, it’ll hurt less.
You don’t say a word when he leans down to kiss your temple as gently as he could, as lovingly as he could. You don’t flinch, you don’t cling. You don’t beg him to stay. You just hum again, quieter this time, and watch him leave like you have a hundred times before.
And when the door closes behind him, the sound is deafening.
You stare at the door long after he's gone. Like if you watch long enough, he'll come back. Like if you sit still enough, you'll hear his footsteps retreating down the hallway. But silence is all that answers you. Silence, and the faint hum of the clock that ticks louder with every passing second.
Your hands twitch against your lap, curling into fists before releasing again. You wonder if tonight it'll be different, if he'll come home and tell you the truth. If he'll break, just once, and tell you what you already know. That there’s someone else. That his heart no longer belongs here, with you.
But it never happens. It’s never happened.
You get up after a while, wandering through the house like a ghost. You pass by the photos on the walls. The framed moments of happiness frozen in time. His smile in those pictures looks real. Like he didn’t know back then what would become of you both. You touch one of the frames, trailing your finger down his face. It feels cruel now, looking at those captured memories.
The bed feels colder when you climb in alone. You face his side, the sheets still perfectly made, undisturbed by the weight of his body. You press your face into his pillow, breathing him in. You think, for a fleeting second, that if you cry hard enough, he might feel it from wherever he is and come home.
But you don’t cry. You’ve already wasted too many nights crying. Instead, you just wait.
Because that's all you know how to do now. Wait. And love him. And hate him a little, too.
THE STORY STARTS EVEN BEFORE THAT. You and Nanami Kento grew up together. Two kids from two very different worlds — he is filled with wealth and privilege, you were with struggle and scarcity. His parents lived in a grand, pristine house, while you lived in a cramped apartment that barely stayed warm in the winter.
His clothes were always crisp and clean, and yours were worn out and patched up. From the moment you realized just how different your lives were, you knew people like you didn’t belong in his world.
And the world didn’t hesitate to remind you of that. The neighborhood kids who ran in the same circles as Nanami never let you forget it. They whispered when you came around, made faces when you approached, and laughed when you walked away.
“Why do you let her hang around you?” they’d ask him. “She doesn't fit in with us.”
But Nanami Kento never wavered. Not once. Not ever.
“She’s my friend.” he’d say, firm and unwavering.
And that was all it took.
It didn’t matter if your shoes had holes or if your hands were rough from helping your family with chores. It didn’t matter that you didn’t have expensive toys or that you couldn’t bring lunch to school some days.
Kento always shared this with you. He always liked making sure you were as full as him. So he would go and split his neatly packed bento in half and hand you the bigger portion without a second thought.
You’d protest, of course, but he’d only shrug and say, “I wasn’t that hungry anyway.”
You knew it was a lie.
Even back then, he always lied.
And he smiles all the same.
He always did that, giving without asking for anything in return, like it was the most natural thing in the world. And you valued him more than anything because of it. But what you didn’t realize was how deeply it had settled in your bones. The way you looked at him, the way you cherished him, the way you loved him.
It wasn’t like one day you just woke up and decided to love Nanami Kento. No, it was a gradual thing. Like the warmth of the sun slowly rising over the horizon. It happened on the days he’d sneak away from his house to find you playing in the dirt, unbothered by the stares of his so-called friends.
It happened when he’d walk you home after school, insisting it was just on the way when it wasn’t. It happened when you were crying after your father came home drunk again, and Nanami held your hand quietly, letting you cry into his shoulder without a word.
It happened every time he chose you.
And because of that, because he never treated you like you were less than him, because he never made you feel like you didn’t belong — you fell in love with him. Quietly. Deeply. Hopelessly. Truthfully.
But you never said a word about it. How could you?
You were still just you. You were unimportant, rough around the edges, struggling to keep your life from falling apart. And he was Nanami Kento, brighter than the sun itself. He was polished, brilliant, and destined for a life far better than the one you could ever give him.
Loving him felt like holding sunlight in your hands.
It was beautiful, but impossible to keep.
And so you stifled it, you swallowed it down.
You smiled when he spoke of his future. Of traveling abroad, of making something of himself — and you ignored the ache in your chest. You told yourself it was enough to simply have him in your life, even if you could never have his heart. But deep down, you knew.
One day, he’d leave.
He’d outgrow this town.
He’d outgrow you.
You’d be left where you always were. You would be standing in the shadow of his light, loving him from a distance. You knew that even if he leaves, even if he doesn’t stay. You would love him all the same.
WHEN THAT DAY CAME, YOU HADN’T EXPECTED IT. You were sixteen when Nanami Kento told you he was leaving. He had gotten accepted into a prestigious school overseas. One that would guarantee him a promising future. His parents were thrilled. His friends envied him.
Everyone around him kept saying to him — You’ll do great things, Nanami. You’re destined for success.
But all you could hear was the sound of your own heart breaking. Yet you didn’t want it to be broken down out loud. So, you decided to go and smile all about it. It was better this way, you think to yourself. He, after all, deserved better than you.
He found you later that evening, sitting on the rusted swing set in the small park where you two always met. You already knew what he was going to say. You could see it in his eyes — a mixture of excitement and guilt.
“I’m leaving.” he finally said, voice quiet. “I got accepted into a school in Denmark.”
You forced a smile, ignoring the lump in your throat. “That’s… that’s amazing, Kento. Really. I’m happy for you.”
But you weren’t.
God, you weren’t.
“I’ll only be gone for a couple of years, you know.” he tried to reassure you. “I’ll visit during the holidays. And we can write letters—”
“Yeah, I know.” you cut him off, still smiling. “We’ll stay in touch. Like we used to.”
But deep down, you knew better. People like you didn’t get to stay in the lives of people like him. Nanami Kento was destined for bigger and better things, all these things that didn’t include you. And you hated yourself for thinking that way.
So instead of breaking down, instead of begging him to stay, you spent your remaining days together trying to memorize everything about him. The way his blond hair would fall over his forehead when he was deep in thought.
The sound of his laugh when you said something ridiculous. The warmth of his hand whenever it brushed against yours. You burned it all into your memory, knowing it was the closest you’d ever get to having him.
And then like the wind, that day came in a sudden push.
You didn’t cry when you said goodbye to him at the train station.
You didn’t flinch when he pulled you into a tight hug and whispered, “I’ll see you soon.”
You didn’t break down when you watched the train pull away, carrying him farther and farther from you. But that night, when you were alone in your bed, staring up at the cracked ceiling — you sobbed until your throat was raw. Because you knew.
You knew that he’s not coming back.
Maybe not intentionally, maybe he would write you a few letters, maybe he would visit during the holidays but eventually, the distance would settle in. He’d meet new people, make new friends, build a new life.
And you? You’d still be here, stuck in the same town, living the same hard life you always had. You didn’t blame him. How could you? He deserved better. Yet you told yourself that you’d get over him. That the ache in your chest would eventually fade. That you’d move on.
But you never did.
The letters came at first. Handwritten, neat, and always signed, Kento.
He’d tell you about the classes he was taking, the places he was visiting, the new friends he was making. And you’d read every word, trying to picture him in that new world of his — a world you didn’t belong to. You always write back, of course. But your letters were never as exciting. What were you supposed to say?
Hey, I’m still working two part-time jobs to help my mom make rent. Our fridge broke again last week, but it’s fine. I’ve gotten used to eating once a day.
No. Instead, you lied. You told him you were doing fine, that life was okay, that you were just happy to hear from him. But as the months went on, the letters became less frequent. And then, eventually, they stopped altogether. And that was it.
Nanami Kento became a part of your past.
He was just another thing you had to let go of.
Yet you think about it now, you should have let go.
You should have let it all be.
IT WAS QUITE A SURPRISE, NOT ONE WHICH YOU HAVE THOUGHT ABOUT. You didn’t know he became an actor. The Nanami Kento standing in front of you now. He was still quite as polished, poised, and impossibly handsome as he was.
And yet, he was a far cry from the boy you used to know. But it was still him, he was all the same. Same deep voice. Same gentle gaze. Same presence that made the world feel a little less heavy.
And yet, there was something else too. A distance.
Like he didn’t quite belong here anymore.
It was like he had outgrown this town, just as you always knew he would.
“Kento, oh wow….” you managed, trying not to let your voice shake. “I… I didn’t know you were back.”
His smile faltered slightly, like he was trying to keep his composure. “Just for a few days. I had some… time off.”
You didn’t miss the way his caramel eyes swept over you. From your wrinkled convenience store uniform to the worn-out shoes on your feet. It was subtle, but you saw it. And it made your stomach twist in shame.
“How’ve you been?” he asked, carefully. Like he was afraid of the answer.
You forced a small laugh, waving a hand. “You know… same old, same old. Nothing much has changed.”
Lie. Everything had changed. You were still here, yes. You were still in the same town, still in the same life — but it felt different now. Colder. Like the weight of the world had settled heavier on your shoulders after he left. And it didn’t escape Kento’s notice.
You were supposed to be somewhere else. He knew that. Out of everyone he’d ever known, you were the smartest. You were the sharpest, the most capable, the one who always dreamed bigger than the town could ever hold.
You used to talk about it all the time — the places you wanted to go, the life you wanted to build. You were supposed to go to college. You were supposed to do great things. And yet here you were. Stuck. In this town. Wearing a faded uniform and a name tag, working a dead-end job.
Why? Why are you still here, suffering like this?
“So, uh….” you cleared your throat, forcing a smile. “How’s Denmark? Or… wait. Are you still there?”
“No, no. I don’t live there.” he answered, his voice quieter now. “I, uh… I moved to Tokyo. For work.”
“Work?” you tilted your head.
And that’s when you saw it. The subtle shift in his stance.
Like he was bracing himself for something.
“...I’m an actor now,” he admitted, almost sheepishly.
You blinked. “Wait — like… on TV?”
“Yeah.” He scratched the back of his neck, looking a little uncomfortable. “Film, mostly. I’ve done a few series too.”
You stared at him, dumbfounded. “You’re kidding.”
He chuckled, though there was no real humor in it. “I’m not. It just… happened, I guess.”
Of course it did, you thought bitterly. Because that’s what people like him did. They left, they made something of themselves, and they became untouchable. Meanwhile, people like you stayed exactly where they were rooted in place, forgotten, ordinary.
“That’s… amazing, Kento. Really.” You smiled, even though it burned your throat. “I’m happy for you.”
But Nanami Kento couldn’t find it in himself to smile back.
Because all he could think about was how wrong this felt.
You’re supposed to be the one out there, he thought. You were always the brilliant one. You were supposed to leave this town — not me. You were supposed to make something of yourself.
Instead, you were still here in this wretched place. In a store that smelled faintly of stale bread and cleaning supplies. Ringing up snacks for high schoolers who would eventually leave you behind just like everyone else did.
“You’re still working here?” he asked softly, his voice careful.
“Yeah. Been here for a couple of years now.” You shrugged like it was nothing. “Pays the bills.”
His stomach twisted at your words all the sudden. “What about school?” he asked. “You… you were supposed to go to college, right? Didn’t you get accepted somewhere?”
You froze. For a brief moment, the smile cracked on your face. But you stitched it back together quickly. “Ah, yeah… I did. But, you know. Life happens.”
Lie, again, huh?
The truth was that you did get accepted. To a top university in Tokyo, actually. But your mom lost her job the same week you got the acceptance letter. Rent fell behind. Bills piled up. And you did what you always did — you stayed.
You got a job, dropped out before you even started, and spent the next few years trying to keep your family afloat. You did everything you could to help your family to survive. You abandoned everything to survive. But you didn’t tell Kento that. You couldn’t.
“Anyway, uh….” you deflected, forcing some cheer into your voice, “I’m sure you’ve got somewhere to be. Don’t let me keep you.”
But Nanami Kento didn’t move.
He couldn’t.
Because he couldn’t stop staring at you. He couldn’t stop thinking about how wrong this was. The person he loved most in this world, the one who deserved everything was still here, stuck, while he was out there living a dream he never even wanted in the first place.
And he hated it.
God, he hated it.
“…Have dinner with me, at least.” he blurted out suddenly.
Your head snapped up. “What?”
“Dinner. Tonight.” His voice was steadier now. “I want to catch up.”
You hesitated. “Kento, you don’t have to—”
“I want to.” His gaze softened. “Please.”
And maybe it was because you were too tired to argue. Or maybe it was because, despite everything, you still loved him. So you gave in. “…Okay. Yeah. Dinner sounds nice.”
And for the first time since he left, Kento felt like he could breathe again.
That night, he picked you up from your small apartment. You tried to dress nicer, but you didn’t have much to work with. It was just a worn-out dress you hadn’t touched in years. When you opened the door and saw him standing there in a tailored coat and polished shoes, you almost told him to forget it.
But Kento only smiled and said, “You look beautiful.”
And God, you hated how much you still loved him.
Dinner was… nostalgic. You talked about old memories, laughed about stupid things you did as kids. But Kento couldn’t stop noticing how guarded you were. How carefully you danced around your life now.
Never mentioning anything too personal, never hinting at how hard things really were. And when the night was over, when he walked you back to your door, he couldn’t help himself.
“…Why did you stay?” he finally asked.
You froze, your hand on the doorknob. “…What?”
“You were supposed to leave this town, you know.” he said, voice cracking slightly. “You were supposed to go to college. Travel. Do everything you always talked about. So… why didn’t you?”
You hesitated. But then you smiled soft and hollow. “Someone had to stay and take care of things.”
And before he could ask what you meant, you gave him one last smile and said. “Goodnight, Kento.”
Then you closed the door. And Kento stood there, staring at the chipped paint on your doorframe, his heart breaking all over again. Because the person he loved most in this world was still stuck in a place she was never meant to stay.
And he didn’t know how to fix it.
NOT A WINK OF SLEEP THAT NIGHT ONCE AGAIN. After you closed the door on Kento, you leaned against it, heart pounding so hard you thought it might burst out of your chest.
You could still feel the warmth of his gaze, still hear the tenderness in his voice when he said you looked beautiful. It was like he still saw you the way he did when you were kids. Like time and distance hadn’t changed a thing.
But it had. You weren’t the same girl you used to be. And he wasn’t the same boy who once shared his lunch with you. He was Nanami Kento now, an actor, a star, someone the world adored. And you? You were still here. Working a dead-end job, carrying the weight of your family’s survival on your back, and holding onto the ghost of a love you never confessed.
So why did it feel like he was still yours?
Why did it still hurt like hell to let him go?
On the other side of that door, Kento didn’t move for a long time. He just stood there, still staring at the door you closed between you two and felt his throat tighten with a kind of pain he hadn’t experienced in years.
Because no matter how much you smiled that night, no matter how light you tried to make your voice sound, he saw it. The exhaustion in your eyes. The tension in your shoulders. The carefully crafted responses designed to keep him from knowing the truth. You were struggling. And it killed him.
Because you were the smartest person he knew. You were supposed to be miles away from this town, pursuing the future you always dreamed of. You were supposed to be untouchable, unstoppable, radiant. But instead… you were here. Tired. Small. Dimming under the weight of a life that never stopped asking more from you.
And Kento couldn’t stand it. The thought of going back to Tokyo, of returning to his world of flashing cameras, scripts, and fame while you were stuck here, surviving day by day, made him physically ill.
I should have taken you with me, he thought bitterly. I never should have left you here.
And that’s when he decided — he wasn’t leaving without you this time.
He didn’t care what it took. He didn’t care if you pushed him away. He didn’t care if you convinced yourself you didn’t belong in his world anymore. He would break down every wall you built around yourself if it meant pulling you out of this life.
Because the truth was he never stopped loving you.
And he’d be damned if he lost you a second time. The next day, you were working your usual shift when the doorbell chimed and you didn’t need to look up to know who it was. You felt it before you even saw him.
“…Kento.” You swallowed hard, forcing a smile. “What are you doing here?”
He looked painfully out of place in the small convenience store. He was dressed in a dark coat, hair perfectly styled, standing taller and broader than you remembered. It was almost laughable. This man who graced movie screens and magazine covers standing in the middle of your dusty workplace like it was the most normal thing in the world.
“Thought I’d stop by today.” he said simply. “I was hoping to see you.”
Your stomach twisted painfully. Don’t do this, Kento.
“I, uh… I’m working on the floor.” you stammered. “Can’t really chat right now.”
“I’ll wait.”
You blinked. “…What?”
“I’ll wait until your shift is over.” he said, completely serious. “Then we’ll grab dinner. My treat.”
“Kento—”
“Don’t say no.” His voice was soft, but firm. “Please.”
And God, you almost did. You almost told him no. You almost told him to leave you alone, that you didn’t want him to see you like this anymore, that you couldn’t handle standing next to him and being reminded of how far apart your lives had become.
But you didn’t. Because deep down, you still craved him.
You craved his voice, his touch, his presence.
Even if it hurts you just do it all over again.
“…Okay.”
The night air was cold, but his coat was warm. Somewhere between dinner and walking you home, Kento had shrugged off his expensive wool coat and draped it around your shoulders without hesitation. You tried to protest, but he wouldn’t hear it.
“Don’t argue with me about this, please.” he murmured, his hand lingering against your arm a little too long.
It was dangerous being this close to him again.
But you couldn’t pull away from him.
“So….” you forced lightness into your voice. “What’s it like being famous?”
He scoffed. “Overrated.”
You laughed softly. “Oh, come on. You’re on billboards now. You can’t tell me it’s not a little amazing.”
“It doesn’t mean anything.” His voice was distant. “Not if you’re not there to see it.”
Your steps faltered. “…What?”
Kento stopped walking — turning to face you, his expression unreadable. “I thought about you every day.” he confessed, his voice raw.
“Kento—”
“The entire time I was gone. I kept wondering what you were doing, if you were okay, if you were happy.” His throat bobbed. “And every time I came back home, I hoped I’d see you, but you were always gone. I… I didn’t know if you wanted to see me again.”
You felt your heart crack open. “Kento…”
“Why didn’t you tell me you stayed?” His voice broke slightly. “Why didn’t you tell me you never went to college?”
Your breath caught in your throat. “I—”
“Do you have any idea how brilliant you are?” His voice was trembling now, thick with emotion. “You were always the smartest person in the room. You deserved to get out of here….to have everything you ever dreamed of. And instead… you stayed. You gave it all up. Why?”
Tears burned the back of your eyes. “Because I didn’t have a choice, Kento.”
“Yes, you did.” His voice cracked. “You could have told me. You could have called me. I would’ve—”
“You would’ve what, Kento?” you choked. “Fixed my life for me? Paid my bills? Dragged me to Tokyo and pretended like I belonged in your world?”
His jaw clenched. “You do belong in my world.”
“No, I don’t.” you snapped, tears finally spilling over. “Look at me. I’ve been stuck in the same place since you left. I’m still living paycheck to paycheck. I didn’t finish school. I’ve done nothing with my life. And you—” your voice cracked painfully. “You’ve become everything you were meant to be.”
Silence. Thick. Suffocating.
“I didn’t want any of it.” His voice was barely a whisper.
You froze. “…What?”
Kento swallowed hard. “I didn’t want fame. The career. The spotlight. I didn’t want any of it. The only thing I ever wanted was you—and I thought… I thought if I made something of myself, you’d still be here when I came back.” His voice cracked. “But you weren’t. And I hated myself for leaving you behind.”
Your knees almost buckled.
“And now that I’m here, with you.” his voice broke. "I can’t stand seeing you like this.”
Tears poured freely down your face. “Kento, don’t—”
“Come with me.” He took a step closer, his hands trembling as they cradled your face. “Come to Tokyo. Stay with me. I’ll pay for your school, I’ll—”
“No!” you sobbed, pulling away. “I’m not your responsibility, Kento—”
“You’re not a responsibility, nor a liability.” his voice cracked. “You’re the love of my life.”
Your heart shattered. And before you could protest again, his mouth was on yours. Desperate, burning, like he was trying to make up for every single day he spent without you. His hands cradled your face, his kiss messy and filled with heartbreak. When he finally pulled away, his forehead pressed against yours.
“Please.” he whispered, voice wrecked. “Let me take you away from here. Let me love you the way I always should have.”
For the first time in years, you let yourself sob in his arms.
Because despite everything, you loved him more than anything in this world.
Despite the distance, the pain, and the time lost, you never stopped loving him either.
And maybe… just maybe… he could still save you.
YOU COULD REMEMBER THE WAY IT RAINED WHEN YOU GOT MARRIED. Not a heavy storm — just a soft, steady drizzle, as if the sky itself was quietly weeping with joy. You stood in a small, intimate venue with that beautiful smile on your face.
Both of you of you surrounded by only a few close friends and family, wearing the simplest white dress you could afford because despite Kento’s insistence that he’d buy you the most extravagant gown in Tokyo, you refused.
“I don’t need anything fancy, you know.” you told him. “I just need you.”
And so there you stood with your fingers trembling, heart racing as Kento watched you walk down the aisle like you were the only thing in the world that mattered. His jaw was tight, his caramel eyes glassy with unshed tears, like he still couldn’t believe this was real. Like he couldn’t believe, after all those years apart, you were finally becoming his wife.
When you finally reached him, his hand grasped yours like a lifeline.
His thumb trembled as it brushed against your skin, and when he whispered, “You’re beautiful.” his voice cracked.
And when the officiant asked if he took you as his wife, Kento didn’t hesitate one bit as he looked at you with the warmest gazes. “I do.” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “I always have.”
Kento never let you go after that.
You moved into his apartment in Tokyo. It was a spacious, light-filled place with floor-to-ceiling windows and a breathtaking view of the city. It was bigger than anything you’d ever lived in, and it almost made you uncomfortable at first.
But Kento never let you feel like you didn’t belong.
“This is our home now, hm?” he told you softly one night as you stood by the window, still struggling to wrap your head around it all. “Not just mine. Ours.”
And you believed him. Because every time he came home from a shoot, tired, disheveled, and smelling like expensive cologne — the first thing he did was find you.
\Whether you were in the kitchen, the bedroom, or curled up in the living room studying, he always sought you out, kissing you like it was the first time every time.
“My wife.” he’d murmur against your lips, as if the words themselves tasted sweet. “My beautiful wife.”
And every time, your heart would ache with disbelief. Because this was real. You were really married to him. You really woke up to him every morning. His arm draped around your waist, his face buried in your neck and he really loved you like you were the most precious thing in the world. But Kento wasn’t done giving you the life you deserved.
“Tokyo University.” he said one night, casually, like it wasn’t the single most outrageous thing you’d ever heard.
You froze mid-bite. “…What?”
“I want you to apply, like you did a long time ago.” he said simply, sitting across from you at the dinner table. “You always wanted to study chemistry. Now’s your chance.”
Your throat tightened. “Kento… I can’t. I haven’t been in school for years. I can’t just—”
“Yes, you can.” His voice was firm but gentle. “You’re the smartest person I’ve ever known. Don’t tell me you can’t do it.”
You swallowed hard, your heart pounding. “But the tuition—”
“I’ll pay for it.”
Your head snapped up. “Kento, no—”
“Yes.” His gaze was unwavering. “I’ll pay for every single yen. I’ll cover your tuition, your textbooks, your lab fees. Everything. You won’t have to worry about anything.” His voice softened. “Please. Let me do this for you.”
Tears burned your eyes. “I don’t want to feel like a burden to you, Kento.”
“You’re not a burden, never will be.” he said fiercely, already pushing his chair back so he could kneel in front of you. His large hands cupped your face, his thumbs wiping away your tears. “You’re my wife. Everything I have is yours. My money, my time, my life. It’s all yours. And if it means giving you the future you always dreamed of, then I’ll do it a thousand times over.”
And with that, you broke down. You sobbed into his chest, clutching him like your life depended on it, because you realized Kento meant it. Every word. Every promise. He was going to build you a life so beautiful, so far removed from the pain you endured, that you’d never have to feel unworthy again.
So the next day, you applied. And Kento wrote the check without blinking an eye.
You could still remember months later, the day you got accepted into Tokyo University, you burst into tears. You were in the kitchen when the letter arrived, your hands trembling as you tore it open and the second you saw “Congratulations, you’ve been accepted!”
You collapsed onto the floor, sobbing.
“Kento, Kento!” you choked, clutching the letter like it was your lifeline. “I got in! Oh god…. I got in!”
Kento was on you in seconds, kneeling beside you, his face crumpling with pride. “I told you. I told you, baby!” he whispered, kissing your forehead. “I told you you could do it.”
And that night, he took you out to dinner, something extravagant, something you never would have been able to afford on your own. When the waiter congratulated you, Kento beamed like he was the one who got accepted.
“Her, it was her who got in.” he told the waiter proudly. “That’s my wife. She’s going to Tokyo University for chemistry. Smartest woman I’ve ever met.”
And when you glanced at him, with those eyes glassy, heart full, you realized he wasn’t just proud. He was in awe of you. Like he always had been.
And for a while, it was perfect.
Life slipped into something sweet and steady. You were a university student again, just like you’d always dreamed. You spent your days attending lectures, taking meticulous notes, and spending long afternoons in the library surrounded by textbooks and the faint smell of old paper. You were learning again. Living again. For the first time in a long time, you felt like you.
And Kento? God, he was your biggest cheerleader.
Every morning before you left for class, he kissed you on the forehead and said, “Knock ‘em dead, love.”
Every night when you came home, exhausted but fulfilled, he had dinner ready and waiting. When you showed him your test scores, perfect marks, one after another. Your husband would beam with pride like he was the one who’d aced the exam.
When you complained about a difficult professor or a tedious lab experiment, he’d listen intently, rubbing circles into your back, and say, “You’ll figure it out. You always do.”
And every night, when you fell asleep beside him, you felt something you hadn’t felt in a long time. Hope. But then —slowly, quietly— the loneliness crept in. Because Kento wasn’t home most of the time.
At first, you didn’t notice. You were busy, after all. You were drowning in lab reports, study sessions, and back-to-back classes. But then you started realizing how quiet the apartment felt when you got home. You’d unlock the door, expecting to hear the hum of the television or Kento’s soft humming in the kitchen but it was always silent. Always empty.
You told yourself it was fine. That was just how it was going to be sometimes. Your Kento was working hard, just like you were. It was only temporary. But weeks passed. Then months. And Kento started coming home later and later.
At first, it was 8 PM. Then 9. Then 10. And soon, there were nights where he didn’t come home at all, just a brief, apologetic text. “Late meeting. Don’t wait for me. Love you.”
And you tried to be understanding. You tried. After all, Kento was the one supporting you. He was paying your tuition, your textbooks, your transportation — everything. He was shouldering the entire financial weight of your dream without a single complaint. The least you could do was be patient.
But good god, it was so lonely.
You’d eat dinner alone most nights, your plate growing cold as you stared at the empty seat across from you. You’d do your assignments at the kitchen table, hoping to hear the jingle of his keys at the door but it never came. You started sleeping alone more often than not, his side of the bed cold and untouched.
And worst of all you missed him.
You missed Kento. You missed the man who used to laugh with you until your stomach hurt.
The man who used to kiss you breathless in the middle of the kitchen just because he could.
The man who used to touch your belly every night and whisper. “I can’t wait to meet our baby.”
The man who promised you. “I’ll always put you first.”
But now? You were starting to feel like you’d lost him. And then came the night that broke you.
It was well past midnight, and you were curled up on the couch, your textbooks sprawled around you. You told yourself you wouldn’t wait up for him, but you did. You always did. Hours passed, and still — no sign of him. Finally, at 1:27 AM, you heard the door unlock.
“Kento?” you called, your voice cracking.
He didn’t answer right away. When he finally stepped into the living room, his tie was loose, his shirt wrinkled, and the exhaustion in his eyes was so deep it made your chest ache.
“Hey.” he murmured, already walking past you toward the bedroom.
And something in you snapped.
“Seriously?” you blurted. “That’s all you have to say?”
Kento froze, his hand still on the doorframe. “…What?”
You stood, your heart pounding. “You’ve been gone all day again. And you just walk in like I don’t even exist?”
He turned to you, confused. “I—I’m sorry. Work ran late—”
“It always runs late, Kento!” your voice cracked, hot tears stinging your eyes. “Every night, I sit here alone. I eat alone. I sleep alone. Do you even realize how lonely it is to come home to an empty apartment every single day?”
Pain flickered across his face. “I know. I’m sorry. I’m just… I’m doing this for you, love. I’m working so you can go to school—”
“I never asked you to do that!” you shouted, and the second the words left your mouth, you regretted them.
Kento blinked, stunned. “…What?”
Your chest heaved. “I never asked you to throw your entire life away for me, Kento! I never asked you to quit your project, or work insane hours, or pay for everything. You just did it. And now it’s like I don’t even have a husband anymore. I just have this… ghost who comes home at 2 AM and leaves before I wake up!”
Silence. Thick. Suffocating.
Kento’s jaw clenched, his eyes darkening. “…You think I want this?”
You froze. “…What?”
“You think I like working sixteen-hour days?” his voice cracked, raw and strained. “You think I enjoy being away from you? Missing dinner, missing sleep, missing everything…..you think any of this is what I wanted?”
Your throat tightened. “Kento—”
“I did it for you, you know that.” he said bitterly. “I did it so you wouldn’t have to worry about money. I did it so you could chase your dream without worrying about bills or tuition. I did it because I thought it would make you happy.” His voice cracked. “But you’re not, are you?”
Tears blurred your vision. “That’s not fair.”
“Isn’t it?” he laughed hollowly, running a hand down his face. “I work until I can’t see straight just to keep everything together and you still think I’m not doing enough.”
“That’s not true at all!”
“Then what do you want from me, love?” his voice finally broke, desperate and shattered. “Tell me. Please. What do you want?”
And the answer was so painfully simple, it tore you apart.
I just want you.
But you couldn’t say it. Because how could you ask that of him when he’d already given you everything? When he was breaking his back just to keep you afloat? When he’d already sacrificed his career, his sleep, his time, his life for you?
So instead, you just cried and cried.
And for the first time in your marriage, Kento didn’t comfort you.
He just turned away, defeated, and said, “I’m going to bed.”
And you realized somewhere along the way, you and Kento had become strangers for the first time.
And it hurts like hell to live with that thought.
But of course, it wouldn’t be the last time.
THINGS DID NOT GET BETTER. If anything, they got worse. You were pregnant. And everything was hurting. It was a different kind of pain now, not just the crushing weight of your depression, but something more physical, more suffocating.
Your body aches constantly. Your back screamed from the weight of your growing belly. Your feet were perpetually swollen. Your nights were restless, spent tossing and turning as the baby kicked relentlessly inside you, reminding you always reminding you — that there was no way out of this life you didn’t want. And it was killing you.
You thought hitting rock bottom would come with some kind of clarity. Like one day, you’d cry hard enough or sleep long enough or starve yourself numb enough that your body would finally break through the darkness. You thought there would be some moment, some visceral breaking point that would force you to finally start healing.
But it never came.
Instead, you just… sank.
Deeper and deeper, like trying to breathe underwater with lungs already half-filled. Every day you woke up was a fresh kind of misery. You couldn’t get out of bed without feeling like your bones were made of lead.
You couldn’t stomach food without wanting to throw it all up later. You couldn’t look in the mirror without despising the reflection. You see a bloated, pale, hollowed out, a shell of the woman you used to be.
And the baby never stopped kicking.
You hated it.
God, you hated it.
You hated the way it never let you sleep. You hated the way your body no longer felt like yours. You hated the constant, suffocating reminder that soon, almost all too soon, you would be responsible for a life you never asked for. A life you were already failing before it even arrived.
But the worst part?
You hated yourself for hating it.
Because what kind of mother resented her own baby before it was even born? What kind of woman laid in bed, day after day, clutching her belly and wishing god, please just make this stop instead of feeling love? What kind of wife watched her husband sacrifice everything for her and still felt nothing but numb, bitter emptiness?
And Kento.
God, Kento.
You couldn’t even look at him anymore without feeling like the most wretched person alive. He was still trying — still holding everything together, still waking up every morning and kissing your forehead, still whispering, “I love you. I’m here.”
But you could see it now — the slow, painful unraveling of the man you loved. The exhaustion in his eyes, no longer just from work but from you. The hesitation in his touch, like he was afraid you’d pull away — and sometimes, you did.
The way his voice cracked when he said, “How are you feeling today, love?” and your answer was always “I’m fine.”
But you weren’t fine.
And Kento knew it.
You could see it every night when he crawled into bed beside you and held you close. The way his hand cradles your stomach, his thumb tracing soft circles over your skin. You could feel it in the way his touch, once so warm and electric, now felt like a desperate attempt to keep you here. Like if he let go for even a second, you’d slip through his fingers entirely.
And you hated that too.
Because you knew you were killing him. Slowly. Quietly. Without even trying. You could see it in his slumped shoulders, in the way his voice grew quieter, in the way he looked at you like he was losing you and didn’t know how to stop it.
And you wanted to scream — Stop loving me. Stop trying to save me. I’m already gone.
But you didn’t.
Because how could you say that to the man who dropped his entire career for you? The man who worked twenty-hour days just to pay for your tuition, your food, your life? The man who still kissed you goodbye every morning and told you, “I love you, always.”
So you did the only thing you could.
You kept shrinking.
You stopped eating. Barely touched your dinner when Kento brought it to you. The smell made you nauseous anyway, and even when it didn’t, you could barely stomach the idea of keeping yourself alive, let alone another human growing inside you.
You stopped leaving the house. Your classes had already been dropped; you told Kento it was temporary, just until you felt better. But deep down, you knew you weren’t going back. Tokyo University had suddenly become a distant dream once again, like a life that belonged to someone else entirely. And you were too far gone now to reach for it again.
You stopped responding to your friends. They texted you constantly, trying to check on you. You know they mean well. You know they just want to be there for you. And that they were excited. But you were having a hard time accepting their well wishes.
“How’s the baby? How’s school? We miss you!”
But the thought of replying made your stomach churn. What were you supposed to say, that wouldn’t come out as a horrible thing?
“I’m miserable. I don’t want this baby. I don’t want this life.”
Would have that gotten you some mercy?
So you ignored them. Deleted their messages. Let your phone die and don't bother charging it. And then you stopped talking to Kento. Not entirely. But enough.
Later on, Kento halted the work on his upcoming project the day after you broke down. No warning. No hesitation. One phone call to his manager, another to his agency, and it was done. His voice was steady, almost unnervingly calm when he said: “I’m taking a break for now. My wife needs me.”
And that was it. He dropped it all like it meant nothing. A project he had poured months of his life into, had gone in seconds. You tried to protest when you found out, but he wouldn’t hear it. His mind was made up before you could even form the words —“Don’t do this for me.”
And then he stayed.
Every single day, he stayed. Morning turned to night, and there he was. Bringing you water when you couldn’t stomach food. Sitting on the edge of the bed while you stared blankly at the ceiling. Holding you through the nights when your body trembled from crying, or worse, the nights when you didn’t cry at all, just lay there like a ghost in your own skin.
He was patient. Devoted. Unwavering.
But it didn’t fix anything.
Because the damage was already done.
You could feel it in the way his touch, once so warm and electric, now felt like a desperate attempt to tether you to the earth. In the way his voice, soft, pleading, loving had seemed to echo against the walls of your hollowed-out chest, never quite reaching you.
In this way you could still feel the crushing weight of your own failure suffocating you, no matter how many times he whispered “I’m here. I’m not leaving.”
And the worst part?
You wanted him to leave.
Because it hurt too much to see him like this. Abandoning his career, his life, his future, for someone who couldn’t even muster the strength to get out of bed. You resented the way he sacrificed everything for you.
You hated how the look in his eyes shifted from affection to concern, from admiration to pity. You despised yourself for being the reason his world was crumbling alongside yours. And deep down, you knew. Kento could stay forever, and it still wouldn’t fix what was already broken.
And after that, you stopped going to school.
At first, you told Kento it was temporary, just a leave of absence until you felt better. But weeks turned into months, and soon your professors were emailing you: “If you do not return, you will have to re-enroll next semester.”
You didn’t respond.
Because the truth was, you didn’t care anymore.
Your stomach was huge now. You could barely walk up the stairs without losing your breath. Your back ached. Your feet were swollen. You couldn’t sleep through the night because the baby was always kicking, and every morning you woke up with the same suffocating thought.
"I don’t want this life."
And the guilt ate you alive.
Because you loved Kento. You loved your baby. But you hated your life. You hated what it had become. You hated the fact that you were no longer a student at Tokyo University. You were just a pregnant woman, a pregnant housewife. You hated the fact that you no longer had a future — you just had motherhood. You just had this house, his status as a wife.
And Kento saw it. He saw how you’d spend hours just sitting in the nursery, staring at the crib with dead eyes. He saw how you stopped studying, stopped watching TV, stopped doing anything. It was like you were fading away.
And it killed him.
You could see it in the way his shoulders sagged a little more each day, as if the weight of watching you deteriorate was slowly crushing him. In the way he tried to hide the bags under his eyes from sleepless nights spent worrying about you.
In this way his voice would crack, just barely, when he’d sit next to you and say, “Talk to me, love. Please.”
But you had nothing to say. What were you supposed to tell him? That you hated the life you were about to bring into the world? That you regretted everything — the pregnancy, the wedding, the choices that led you here? That sometimes, when you laid in bed at night, you imagined what it would be like if you just… didn’t wake up?
So you said nothing. Nothing at all.
And Kento tried to be strong for both of you. God, he tried.
He started cooking your favorite meals, hoping that if he made something delicious enough, you’d actually eat. He read parenting books late into the night, convinced that if he just learned enough, he could do this whole thing for the both of you, carry the weight, make up for the pieces of you that were falling apart. He took you on walks when he could get you out of bed, holding your hand like it was the only thing anchoring him to hope.
But it was never enough.
It was never going to be enough.
Because the truth was — you weren’t just sad.
You were grieving everything that had come to pass.
You were grieving the life you lost, the person you used to be. You were grieving the dreams you once held so fiercely. Finishing university, traveling, building a career as a chemist on the international level. All of it now reduced to a hazy memory of a different girl. A girl you didn’t even recognize anymore. A girl you resented for being so foolish, for thinking she could have it all.
And you were grieving the love between you and Kento — or rather, the version of it that existed before the pregnancy. Before everything became tainted by your guilt, your depression, your ever-growing resentment for the life you didn’t want.
You knew that Kento saw it too.
He saw how you flinched when he touched your stomach, not out of pain, but because it reminded you of what you were trapped in. He saw how your kisses grew colder, how you turned your head when he tried to kiss you goodnight. He saw how you stopped saying your i love yous first — how sometimes, you didn’t say it at all.
And still, he stayed by your side. But it was breaking him whole.
You could hear it in the way his voice cracked one night when he thought you were asleep.
He sat beside you in bed, his hand resting gently on your belly, and you heard him whisper back to you. “I don’t know how to fix this.” His voice trembled. “I don’t know how to help you.”
And that was when you realized — you weren’t the only one grieving. Kento was grieving too. He was grieving the wife he used to know. The one who laughed too loud at his jokes, who kissed him in the morning just because, who fell asleep on the couch with a textbook still in her lap.
He was grieving the life you both dreamed of late nights studying, early mornings rushing to class, careers that would take you far. He was grieving the love that used to be effortless, the kind that didn’t require whispered prayers in the middle of the night, hoping that tomorrow would hurt less than today.
And the worst part?
You were the one who did this to him.
At least that’s how you saw it all now.
You were the one who dragged him down into this suffocating darkness with you. You were the one who made him abandon his project, his career, his life. All for a woman who could barely look at herself in the mirror without breaking.
And every day he stayed, every day he kissed your forehead and said “I’m here”, you hated yourself a little more.
You hated yourself so much that you started to wonder if maybe — just maybe — Kento would be better off without you.
And that thought never really left.
Even when he painted the nursery walls soft yellow and smiled like he wasn’t dying inside.
Even when he held your hand in the middle of the night and promised, “We’ll get through this. I swear we will.”
Even when he looked at you with a love so devastatingly pure, it only made you ache more.
Because you couldn’t shake the feeling. That Kento deserved a better wife. And your baby deserved a better mother. And you? You didn’t deserve them at all. Around your seventh month, you completely broke.
Kento found you in the bathroom at 3 AM all alone as you were sitting in the empty bathtub, knees pulled to your chest, sobbing silently. You looked miserable with your hair disheveled and your face contorted into this look, full of grief and suffering.
“Baby?” His voice cracked. “Oh my god, baby, what’s wrong?”
And you just shook your head. “I hate this so much.” you gasped through your tears. “I hate my life. I hate my body. I hate everything. I don’t want to do this anymore, Kento. I can’t…..I can’t breathe.”
And Kento completely fell apart at the sight of your tears, falling over and over again. “Baby, no— no, no, no.” he dropped to his knees beside the tub, his hands shaking. “Don’t say that. Please don’t say that. I’m here now. I’ll fix it. I’ll make it better, so—”
“You can’t!” you screamed, your voice raw and cracked. “You can’t fix this, Kento! I’m already ruined! My life is already ruined!”
And Kento? Kento completely broke. Because he realized you weren’t talking about the pregnancy. You were talking about yourself. And you were gone. All there was left now was the shell, that shell he didn’t recognize.
“I should’ve never gotten pregnant, Kento.” you sobbed, your body shaking. “I should’ve never gotten married. I should’ve stayed in school. I should’ve never left the countryside. I should’ve……I should’ve never let this happen.”
And Kento completely lost it. “Don’t say that.” he begged, his voice cracking.
He climbed into the bathtub with you, fully clothed, and wrapped his arms around you. “Don’t say that, baby, please— please don’t say that. You’re not ruined. I swear to god, I’ll fix it. I’ll fix everything. Just don’t give up on me. Please don’t give up on me.”
And you just sobbed.
Because deep down, you already had.
You were right to feel that way.
It was only a matter of time when the labor came early.
You had never expected it — not this soon, not like this.
It was just around thirty-five weeks then. The baby wasn’t supposed to come yet. You still had time. Weeks. You weren’t ready. Your hospital bag wasn’t packed. The nursery still smelled like fresh paint. You hadn’t even washed the baby’s clothes yet. You weren’t supposed to go into labor yet.
But the universe didn’t care.
Your water broke in the middle of the night — and you knew instantly that something was wrong. The pain hit fast and hard, unlike anything you’d ever felt. Sharp, blinding contractions ripped through your abdomen, so intense that it stole the breath from your lungs.
You barely managed to shake Kento awake, your voice cracked and choked, “Kento — my water……it broke—”
And the moment he saw the panic in your eyes, he moved. Kento didn’t even ask questions. He sprang out of bed, grabbing his phone with one hand and you with the other, already calling for an ambulance.
His voice was low, controlled, but you could hear the terror behind it. “Yes, my wife is thirty-five weeks pregnant. Her water just broke — she’s in pain — please send someone—”
But the contractions were coming too fast. One after the other, barely a minute in between, and by the time Kento helped you into the back of the ambulance, you knew. The baby was coming now. And the baby would have no mercy on you.
“No, no, no!” you sobbed, clutching your belly as another contraction ripped through you, your body already beginning to push despite your desperate attempts to stop it. “It’s too soon — it’s too soon—”
Kento was right there beside you, his hand in yours, his voice cracked and desperate. “You’re okay, love. You’re gonna be okay. I’m right here. I’m not leaving you.”
But you didn’t feel okay. You felt like you were dying. And by the time you reached the hospital, you were already fully dilated. The doctors barely had time to wheel you into labor and delivery before you were screaming through another contraction, your body forcing you to push despite your terror.
And Kento was there. The entire time — he was there. His hand never left yours, his voice never stopped murmuring reassurances in your ear. “You can do this, love. I know you can. Just a little longer. Just hold on for me.”
But you couldn’t.
Because something was wrong.
You could feel it in your bones. In the way your body fought itself with every push, in the way your vision kept blurring, in the way you couldn’t seem to catch your breath no matter how hard you tried. And then, in the middle of a push — you felt it.
A sudden, hot gush between your legs. But it wasn’t amniotic fluid this time. It was warm. And sticky. And you didn’t have to look down to know. You were bleeding. A lot. You could feel how it echoes down, heavy and brutish.
“Kento—” your voice cracked, raw with pain. “Something’s— something’s wrong—”
And then you heard it.
The doctor’s voice, sharp and urgent.
“She’s hemorrhaging. We’re losing her.”
And that’s when Kento lost his fucking mind.
“What?” His voice snapped, pure, raw panic flooding his face. His grip on your hand tightened like a vice. “What do you mean you’re losing her?!”
“Her blood pressure is dropping! Massive uterine hemorrhage. Doctor, she’s losing too much blood—”
“No — no, no, no—” Kento stumbled forward, his voice cracking as his hands shook. “Do something! Save her! Save them both!”
“We need to get the baby out now or we’re going to lose them both, Mr. Nanami!”
And suddenly it was chaos. Nurses shouting. Machines beeping. Someone calling for blood transfusions. And you — fading. You could feel it. Your body was giving out, your vision was growing dim, and the only thing you could focus on was Kento.
“Kento.” you rasped, your voice so faint, so weak. Your body felt like it was drifting. “I—I love you—”
“No!” Kento screamed. He screamed like something inside him was tearing apart. His hands clawed at the hospital bed, his body lunging toward you as the doctors tried to pull him away. “No, stay with me! Stay with me, love! Don’t you fucking do this—Don’t you dare leave me!”
But you were already slipping.
The last thing you heard was his voice, raw and broken.
“I can’t do this without you. Please! Please don’t leave me. Please—”
And then, darkness.
HE DOESN’T KNOW WHAT TO DO. Nanami Kento couldn’t do anything but collapse in the hallway. The moment they pulled him out of the delivery room. The moment the words the doctor said, all of that rang in his ears like a death sentence. He was sure that something inside him snapped.
And when the door slammed shut behind him, separating him from you, Kento’s knees buckled. He hit the floor hard. Hands splayed out against the cold tile, chest heaving, throat raw from screaming. He didn’t even realize he was still screaming until two nurses rushed toward him, trying to pull him up, trying to calm him down, but it was useless.
Because he could still hear it. The frantic shouts of the doctors. The horrifying words “Massive hemorrhage. We’re losing her.” The sound of your screams cutting off too abruptly. And worst of all — the unbearable silence that followed.
“No—” Kento howled, his voice breaking like glass. His hands clawed at his hair, his entire body wracked with violent, gut-wrenching sobs. “No, no, no— I killed her. I fucking killed her—”
“Sir, Mr. Nanami.” one of the nurses knelt beside him, reaching out. “You have to breathe, you’re hyperventilating—”
But Kento didn’t hear her.
He couldn’t hear anything.
He didn’t care to hear whatever that was.
All he could think about, all he could see was you. Your face twisted in pain. The absolute terror in your eyes when you realized something was wrong. The way you sobbed I don’t want this, Kento, I’m not ready. And he did this. He did this to you.
His body convulsed with the force of his grief, his head slamming against the tile as his sobs tore from his chest like a wounded animal. “I killed her. I killed her. I made her hate her life and now she’s gone. She’s gone—”
“Sir—” The nurse was trying to hold him down now, his entire body thrashing against the floor as he screamed. “Sir, please, you’re going to hurt yourself—”
“LET ME GO!” Kento roared, his voice so raw it barely sounded human. “She’s dying in there. Do you understand me?! She’s fucking dying in there and I……”
Another contraction of sobs wracked his chest, and his fists slammed into the floor so hard that his knuckles split. Blood smeared against the tile, but he didn’t feel it. He couldn’t feel anything.
“I made her hate her life.” his voice cracked, his chest seizing with suffocating grief. His hands curled into his hair again, yanking hard as if trying to punish himself. “I did this to her. I made her want to die. And now she’s gone and I’m still here. ”
“Stop, please.” the nurse’s voice broke, her own eyes glassy as she tried to steady him. “She’s not gone. They’re trying to save her in there, with the baby.”
“No.” Kento’s head snapped up, his face twisted in a horrifying mix of rage and agony. His eyes were bloodshot, glassy, utterly devastated. “You don’t get it. You don’t fucking get it.” His voice cracked so sharply it sounded like it physically hurt him to speak.
“She wanted to die, to be free of that misery. Don’t you see?” he choked. “She hated her life. And it’s my fault. It’s my fucking fault—”
And then his body gave out.
His chest collapsed onto the cold tile floor, his forehead pressed into it as his entire body shook. Choked, gasping sobs clawed from his throat, so violent that he could barely breathe. His lungs were burning, his vision was spinning, and he was sure, so fucking sure, that this was it. That they were going to come out and tell him you were dead.
And it was his fault.
All of it was his fault.
Because he saw it.
He saw it every single day. The way you sat in the nursery with dead eyes. The way you stopped smiling. The way you couldn’t even say I’m excited without your voice cracking. The way your love for him was slowly being choked out by the sheer weight of your depression.
And he didn’t stop any of it. Instead, he told you to keep going. He told you to hold on. He let you suffer in silence because he thought that’s what you needed but you didn’t. You needed help. You needed saving. And instead, he trapped you in a life you never wanted.
And now you are dying.
All because of him.
“I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” Kento sobbed, his forehead slamming against the tile again, his blood smearing across the floor. “I’m so fucking sorry. Please….please, I’ll do anything. Just let her live. Please.”
And that was the first time in his life that Kento Nanami prayed. He prayed like a man possessed. Like a man who had nothing left to lose. His bloody fists clawed at the tile, his nails cracking against it as he begged.
“Take me,please.” he sobbed, his voice mutilated from screaming. “Please….just take me instead. I don’t care. I don’t fucking care. Just…. Please don’t take her. Don’t take my wife. Don’t take my baby. I’ll do anything.”
But the silence stretched on.
And he was certain that you were already gone.
Hours continued to make mockery of him.
Agonizing, torturous hours passed — and Kento was still on the floor.
He didn’t move. Didn’t breathe right. Didn’t think. His body was stuck in that same position. Still face down, forehead pressed against the cold tile, hands trembling as he clenched them into bloody fists. His chest was heaving in short, sharp gasps, his entire body quaking as he sobbed.
He was certain you were dead. He felt it. He felt the moment your soul left the room. He felt the moment the light in his life snapped off like a switch.
He was convinced that at any second, the doctor was going to come out, look him in the eyes, and say, “I’m sorry, Mr. Nanami. We couldn’t save her.”
And he would never forgive himself.
Because he killed you.
His fault. His fault. His fucking fault.
He was still gasping, still clawing at the ground, still praying like a desperate man when he finally heard the door open. Kento’s head snapped up. His bloodshot, swollen eyes immediately locked onto the doctor walking toward him, his scrubs covered in blood — your blood — and Kento’s entire body seized.
“Mr. Nanami—”
“Where is she?” Kento screamed. His voice cracked, broke, his entire body lunging toward the doctor like a caged animal. His hands fisted the man’s scrubs, yanking him forward. “Is my wife alive? Tell me, damn it? Is she alive?”
The doctor barely had a chance to respond before Kento screamed again. “Tell me you saved her, goddamn you!”
And the doctor’s mouth opened — and Kento swore the entire universe stopped spinning when he finally said, “…She’s alive.”
Kento’s entire body collapsed. His legs gave out. His grip on the doctor’s scrubs slipped. And then he didn’t realize that he had hit the floor. A gasping, broken sob ripped from his throat. The kind of sob that came from a man who was seconds away from losing everything and his entire body convulsed as he wept.
“Oh my god…..” Kento choked, his hands flying to his face, clawing at his own skin like he was trying to ground himself. “Oh my god. She’s alive. She’s alive!”
“Her condition is critical, Mr. Nanami.” the doctor warned, his voice low but steady. “We had to perform an emergency c-section and a hysterectomy to stop the bleeding. She lost over forty percent of her blood volume. We had to resuscitate her twice on the table—”
“Resuscitate?” he gasped, his vision swimming. His stomach lurched. “You mean she….she died?”
“Clinically, yes. Twice.” The doctor’s face softened with pity. “But we got her back. She’s stable now — unconscious, but alive.”
And that was all Kento needed to hear.
He ran. He didn’t even think. His legs moved before his brain could catch up, his entire body sprinting down the hall, his bloody knuckles slamming into every door he passed until he finally found your room.
The second he stepped inside, he broke.
Because there you were.
Unconscious.
Your body was completely limp, hooked up to a ventilator, your skin so pale it looked blue. Tubes were coming out of everywhere. From your arm, your nose, your mouth and there were fresh surgical dressings covering your abdomen where they had cut you open to get the baby out.
Kento couldn’t breathe. A strangled, animalistic sound tore from his throat like something between a sob and a scream and then he collapsed beside your bed. His hand shot out, desperately clutching yours, his entire body wracked with gut-wrenching sobs as he shook.
“I’m so sorry…..oh my god, I’m so fucking sorry, baby.” Kento’s voice shattered, his head dropping onto your hand as his body convulsed. His chest was heaving so violently that he was on the verge of hyperventilating. “I did this. I did this to you and I….”
He couldn’t stop sobbing. His forehead pressed against your limp hand, his body rocking as he cried like a child. “I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry….” he choked. “I made you hate your life and I trapped you. I killed you…. oh my god, I killed you….”
And the guilt hit him like a sledgehammer.
Because it was true. All of it.
He saw the way you suffered. The way you faded every single day. The way you stopped smiling. The way you stopped living. And instead of saving you, he kept telling you to hold on. Just a little longer, love. We’re almost there. Just a little longer.
But you weren’t okay. And Kento didn’t listen. And now you were lying there. Pale, lifeless, barely hanging on. All because of him. And the weight of it crushed him whole. He felt like Atlas carrying the world on his shoulders.
And then finally, you woke up.
“…Kento?” your voice cracked.
“Baby.” he sobbed, grabbing your face, pressing desperate kisses all over your skin. “Oh my baby…..you’re awake. You’re awake. I thought I lost you. I thought….”
“…Where’s the baby?”
And Kento completely broke. “The baby’s fine, don’t worry.” he choked. “She’s perfect. She’s beautiful. But you….you scared the shit out of me, baby. Please don’t ever do that again.”
And when they finally brought your baby girl in and you held her for the first time — you did something you didn’t expect. You cried. And then you sobbed. Because for the first time in nine months — you finally felt something coherent. Something good.
“…She’s beautiful.” you gasped. “I didn’t think I’d love her. But I do. I love her so much.”
Kento just collapsed against your hospital bed, sobbing. “I knew you would. I knew you would.”
But things are like the weather.
They were bound to change.
You should have known.
THE FIRST MONTH WAS HARD, BUT AS TIME WENT ON, IT GOT WORSE. You came home from the hospital physically intact but mentally, you were gone. You still didn’t go back to school. You didn’t touch your textbooks. You didn’t even mention chemistry. The once-brilliant student who dreamed of working in a lab was now just… a mother. And you hated it.
Every single day felt like a fog. You were exhausted but it wasn’t the baby’s fault. You knew that much. It was you that was malfunctioning. You didn’t know how to connect with her. Every time she cried, you felt nothing.
Every time she smiled, you felt nothing. Every time Kento handed her to you and said something to praise your beautiful daughter, you didn’t know how to react. You just nodded and let it go. And Kento noticed. God, he noticed.
Kento stayed home for a month. He refused to leave your side. He didn’t take calls, he didn’t attend meetings. He just stayed home. But his contract required him to go back to work eventually. And you… you told him to go.
“Go, you have to.” you whispered, your voice dead. “You have to work, Kento. We have bills. You already missed so much.”
But Kento didn’t want to.
“Baby— no. I don’t give a shit about work. I’m not leaving you like this.”
And you forced a smile. “I’m fine, Kento.”
But you weren’t.
You weren’t.
And Kento knew it.
But eventually, he had to go. He had no choice. His manager was calling nonstop. His agency was threatening breach of contract. He had a new film that needed him and Kento was the lead role. So he left. And the guilt burned a hole in his chest.
The first day he was back on set, he couldn’t focus. His co-stars were talking to him, the director was giving him instructions but all he could think about was you. Home. Alone. With a baby you didn’t love. Kento hated himself.
He was filming a scene when his phone buzzed in his pocket — and when he saw your name pop up, he immediately froze.
“CUT!” the director barked. “Kento, you okay?”
“…Yeah, director.” he croaked. “I just— I need five minutes.”
And then he ran.
He ran behind the trailer, shaking, and picked up the phone. “Baby?” he gasped, panic echoing in his voice. “What’s wrong? Is the baby okay? Are you okay?”
Silence. “…I don’t think I can do this anymore.”
And Kento’s heart completely shattered.
“Baby…..” his voice cracked. “What do you mean?”
“I mean…..” you gasped, voice shaking. “I mean I can’t do this. I can’t be a mom. I don’t love her, Kento. I don’t—I don’t feel anything for her. I just feel empty. And I know she deserves better. I know you deserve better. I think….I….I just….”
Your voice cracked. “I think I ruined my life.”
Kento collapsed. “No, baby. No. Don’t say that. Please don’t say that.” He was crying now, gasping into the phone. “You didn’t ruin your life. You didn’t. I promise I’ll fix this. I’ll come home right now—”
“No, you won’t.”
Kento completely broke. “Baby, please.”
“No, Kento. You have to work. We need the money. We need—”
“I don’t care about the fucking money!” Kento sobbed, clutching his hair. “I care about you! I care about our family! Please don’t give up on me, baby. Please don’t give up on her.”
But you just hung up.
Kento completely lost it.
He didn’t go back on set. He stayed behind the trailer, sobbing into his hands, shaking, thinking: “I ruined her life. I did this to her. She was supposed to be in college — not stuck at home with a baby.”
And that thought ate him alive. The next few weeks were worse. Kento was dying. Not physically but mentally, emotionally and spiritually, he was. Every single day he walked onto set, it felt like he was leaving you behind. And it was killing him.
Because all he could think about was you. Alone. Depressed. Hollowed out. Not wanting the baby. And he wasn’t there. He was never there. Every single time he put on that suit, stepped in front of the cameras, smiled for his co-stars. He was dying.
Because he knew. He knew the second he came home, you would be worse. Every day it got worse. Every fucking day.
At first, it was subtle. You were tired. Distant. Quiet. But then the days started stretching into weeks, and suddenly you weren’t just tired, you were empty. Your smiles were forced. Your voice was flat. You didn’t ask about his day anymore. You didn’t kiss him when he got home.
And Kento tried to justify it. It’s just the hormones. She’s overwhelmed. She’ll come back to me soon. She’ll come back to me.
But you didn’t.
And Kento broke down again.
Because the more days that passed, the less of you he saw.
You stopped eating dinner with him. You stopped holding the baby. You stopped getting out of bed. You wouldn’t look at him. And the worst part? You didn’t even cry. You just… stared. Blank. Numb. And Kento couldn’t handle it.
He fucking hated himself. Every single day he drove to set, his stomach would turn. He’d clench his jaw the entire time, his hands shaking as he held the steering wheel because he knew. You were at home. Alone. With a baby you didn’t love. And he wasn’t there. And the guilt was going to fucking eat him alive.
One night, Kento came home early. He couldn’t do it anymore. He was on set, trying to read his lines, but his hands were shaking. His mouth felt dry. His mind kept screaming to him: She’s alone. She’s not okay. She’s not okay. She’s not okay. Go home right now.
So he left. He didn’t even tell his manager. He just ripped off his mic and drove home. And when he walked through the door….You were just… sitting there. On the couch. Completely catatonic. Your body was slumped forward. Your eyes were glazed over, completely hollow. You weren’t blinking. You weren’t moving. You weren’t alive.
Baby?” His voice shattered.
Nothing. Kento’s heart slammed into his throat. He dropped his keys, his coat, everything, and sprinted toward you, falling to his knees in front of the couch.
“Baby, please….” his voice cracked. His hands cupped your face, his thumbs trembling as they brushed over your cheeks. “Please talk to me. Please tell me what’s wrong.”
But you didn’t blink.
You didn’t look at him.
You just… stared at the wall.
Kento’s stomach lurched.
His throat closed.
And then you finally spoke.
In a voice so dead, so hollow, that it didn’t even sound like you anymore. “…I don’t want to be a mom anymore.”
“Baby,” his voice broke. He practically collapsed against you, his forehead pressing to your lap as his hands clutched yours. “Please don’t say that. Please, god—”
“I don’t.” you said flatly. Your voice didn’t even crack. It was just… dead. “I don’t want to do this anymore. I don’t want to be here. I don’t want her. I don’t want anything.”
Kento’s entire body convulsed.
“Baby, no.” His voice split down the middle. His hands squeezed yours so tight his knuckles went white. “Please don’t talk like that. I know it’s hard. I know you feel alone. But I love you. I love our baby. We can fix this, baby. I’ll fix it. I’ll fix everything.”
But you didn’t believe him.
Because the truth was — you didn’t want him to fix it.
You didn’t want help. You didn’t want therapy. You didn’t want him to stay home from work. You didn’t want him to coddle you or tell you it would get better.
You just wanted your old life back. You wanted school. You wanted chemistry. You wanted the future you spent years building. But instead, you were just Keiko’s mother. And you fucking hated yourself for it.
“I never wanted this.” you whispered numbly, your eyes glazed over. “I didn’t want to have a baby. I didn’t want to give up school. I didn’t want this life. And now it’s all I have.”
Kento couldn’t breathe. His chest split open. His hands shook violently as he tried to pull you closer, his head buried in your lap. “Please, baby….” his voice splintered. “Please don’t talk like that. I need you. Our baby needs you. We love you.”
But you didn’t respond.
You just kept staring.
Kento sobbed heavily.
His entire body convulsed. His shoulders shook. His throat ripped open as gut-wrenching sobs tore out of him. “I’m so sorry.” he gasped. His face buried into your lap, his tears soaking your clothes. “I’m so fucking sorry, baby.”
And you didn’t comfort him. You didn’t hold him. You didn’t wipe his tears. You didn’t say anything. Because deep down, you hated him, too. You hated that he got to have a life. You hated that he still had his career. You hated that he still had a future.
And you, who you once knew?
You were just a mom.
You were trapped.
And you resented him for it.
YOU WENT AWAY FOR A LITTLE WHILE. It was a shut-in therapy. Somewhere far. Somewhere quiet. Somewhere that felt detached from the life you had been drowning in. Kento made the arrangements. You didn’t ask him to but he just did it. One night, after finding you curled up in the corner of the nursery, crying so hard you couldn’t breathe, he made the decision himself.
You don’t even remember how it happened — one moment you were screaming I don’t want this, I don’t want this, I don’t want this life anymore, and the next, your husband Kento was quietly helping you with packing your bags.
“Baby….” his voice cracked, his hands trembling as he folded your clothes into a suitcase. “You need help. You need real help. And I can’t—” his throat choked up. “I can’t keep watching you like this. I can’t keep coming home to you like this. I need you to get better, baby. I need you.”
You didn’t fight him.
Because deep down, you knew.
You needed help.
And when you left, Kento didn’t cry. He didn’t break down. He didn’t beg you to stay. He just kissed your forehead, buckled you into the passenger seat, and drove you there himself. The drive was silent. But when you arrived and it came time for him to leave, you felt him break.
Kento clutched your hands so hard you thought he might shatter them. His forehead pressed to yours, his voice splintering as he begged. “Please come back to me. Please get better. Please..... I don’t care how long it takes, just please don’t give up on us.”
And then he left.
And you stayed.
And the first few weeks were hell.
You fought everything. The therapy. The group sessions. The self-reflection. The constant “how are you feeling?” The exposure therapy to bond with your baby. The “you’re not alone” pep talks from strangers who did not know you.
And every single night, you thought about calling Kento. You thought about screaming into the receiver I’m done, come get me, I can’t do this anymore, please just let me go home.
But you didn’t.
Because somewhere deep, deep, deep down, you wanted to get better. And slowly you did. It wasn’t linear. Some days were good. Some days were awful. Some days you held your baby in your arms and felt nothing. Some days you sobbed so hard that you thought you’d vomit. Some days you sat in the therapy circle, refusing to speak, refusing to participate, refusing to care.
But then some days, you looked at your baby and felt something. Not love. Not joy. But something. A tinge of warmth in your chest. A pang of protectiveness. And slowly, slowly, something began to grow. And then six months later, you came home. Kento was there, waiting for you.
The second you stepped through the door, his entire body crashed into you. His arms crushed you against him, his hands cradling the back of your head, his chest heaving as he sobbed harder than you had ever seen him cry.
“Baby!” he gasped into your hair, his voice cracking. “God, I missed you….I missed you so fucking much! I thought you’d never come back to me and Keiko.”
And you sobbed too.
Because you missed him. God, you missed him.
And that night, when you walked into the nursery and you saw your baby again for the first time in months. You cried harder than you ever had in your life. Because for the first time in a long while, you wanted her. And you didn’t hate her anymore.
But… the thing was, your relationship with Kento. It was never the same. You wanted it to be. You tried so hard. Kento tried, too. He was so patient. So gentle. So loving. But something between you both felt… off.
You had a hard time touching him. Being intimate with him. You couldn’t explain why but every time Kento kissed you, really kissed you, or ran his hands down your waist, or tried to pull you into his lap, your body would freeze.
Kento noticed. But he never pushed. He never said a word. He just waited. God, he waited. But the truth was you didn’t know how to give him that part of you anymore. It wasn’t that you didn’t love him. You did. You loved him so much. You adored him. You cherished him. You owed him your life.
But every time you tried to make love to him, it felt like you were reopening the wound. It felt like you were back there again. Heavily pregnant, crying yourself to sleep, suffocating in a life you didn’t want. And you hated it. You hated that your body betrayed you. You hated that you wanted to be with Kento, but the second he kissed you, you’d tense and apologize and turn away.
One night, he finally brought it up.
It was subtle. Careful.
“Baby…..” he murmured as you both laid in bed, his fingers brushing over your bare shoulder. “Do you… not want me anymore?”
And your heart dropped. “What?”
Kento swallowed thickly, his voice small. “You never touch me anymore. You never kiss me first. You… you flinch when I touch you sometimes. And I just…. I don’t know if it’s me or if you just… don’t want me anymore.”
“No — no, Kento, I do.” you sobbed, immediately turning to clutch his face in your hands. “I love you. I love you so much. I just…..I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I don’t know why it’s so hard for me to….. to be close to you. I want to. I really do. I just….”
Kento shook his head. “Baby, no.” his voice splintered. “It’s not your fault. God, it’s not your fault.”
But you still hated yourself for it.
Because every time Kento looked at you with that softness, that adoration, that undying love — all you could feel was guilt. Guilt for what you put him through. Guilt for resenting him. Guilt for pushing him away. And the fullness of the intimacy, it never really came back.
You tried.You forced yourself sometimes, letting him kiss you, letting him touch you — but it felt wrong. Not because of him. But because your body wouldn’t let you have it. Your body still remembers the trauma. Kento never blamed you.
But it killed him. Because every night he’d roll over in bed, aching for you but he wouldn’t touch you. He wouldn’t dare. He knew if he tried, you’d flinch. You’d shut down. And he couldn’t handle that. So, instead all he could do was just… love you from afar.
But how has that ever been enough?
THE FIRST TIME YOU FOUND OUT ABOUT KENTO’S CHEATING, IT WAS PURELY BY ACCIDENT. It must have been years later. After the therapy, after the recovery, after you slowly started piecing your life back together. Your daughter Keiko was already walking, already talking. You had gone back to school part-time, slowly finishing your chemistry degree.
And your intimacy with Kento? It had started to come back. Well, not fully. Not like it used to be. But you were trying your hardest with everything. You wanted to make sure that you could do it again. Your husband was waiting, and he deserved it. He deserved your love so much more than anyone.
You started off small. You started to hold hands and then you started kissing him again. You started letting him touch you again. You even started making love again. Though it still wasn’t what it once was. You didn’t initiate it. You didn’t crave it. You just… let it happen. Because you wanted to be close to him. You wanted to fix what was broken.
Yet, Kento was still distant. Not in the obvious way, no. Kento still loved you. Fiercely. Deeply. His hands were still gentle when he brushed your hair behind your ear. His voice was still soft when he murmured his devotions to you every morning. His kisses were still warm when he kissed you goodbye.
But in his eyes, you could see his eyes so clearly. His eyes always looked starved. Like he was still reaching for something you wouldn’t give him. Like no matter how hard you tried, it would never be enough. And deep down, you knew. You would never be able to give that to him ever again.
You saw it. Every night when he rolled over, half-hard in bed, but he wouldn’t touch you. Every morning when he’d linger in the shower, his back to you, his hand clenched into a fist. Every time you let him inside you, and you could feel the heartbreak in his touch, like he was still waiting for you to love him the way you used to.
And you hated yourself for it.
But you never thought…….
You never thought he’d cheat.
Until one day, you saw the message.
You were on his phone. It wasn’t intentional. His phone was sitting on the coffee table while he was in the shower, and it buzzed. You didn’t think much of it at first — just a glance, a mindless reflex. But then you saw the notification. A text message. From a number you didn’t recognize.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t know he was married.”
And your blood ran cold instantly.
You froze as your pupils dilated.
Your hand shook as you unlocked his phone. His password was your anniversary, for fuck’s sake and when you opened the message thread… It was all there. The proof.
It was from months ago. At least half a year. Some random woman. The messages were fragmented. But clearly, Kento had deleted most of them. But there was enough. Enough to piece it together.
The first message was from her. “Hey, I had fun last night :) Let me know if you ever want to do it again.”
And then his response — curt. “I can’t continue on with this. I’m married. I love my wife. And….I have a daughter.”
Then her response. “I didn’t know that. I’m sorry. I won’t bother you again.”
And that was it. But it didn’t fucking matter. Because the implication was there. The truth was there. Kento had slept with her. He had fucked her. He had cheated on you. He decided to go on with this, swallowed by the need and by lust.
And you just… You just sat there. Staring at the message. Feeling like the ground was ripped from beneath you. And the thing that destroyed you most was that you weren’t even surprised. Because you knew. You always knew.
You saw it in his eyes every single day. That hunger. That emptiness. That quiet, unspoken need for something you weren’t giving him. And you thought you were fixing it. You thought you were trying. But clearly… clearly it wasn’t enough.
You didn’t confront him immediately. You didn’t scream. You didn’t cry. You didn’t throw his phone at him the second he walked out of the bathroom. You didn’t do anything. You just… sat there. And thought about it.
And the longer you thought about it, the more it made sense.
Of course he cheated.
Of course he did.
You deprived him for years. You denied him your body. You made him watch you suffer, made him sleep beside you every night knowing he couldn’t touch you, made him ache for you in ways you never fulfilled. That’s the worst part. You understood. You understood why he did it. That was the part that made you nauseous.
Because the truth was you had already broken his heart long before he ever stepped out of your marriage. You had pushed him away for so long, turned cold for so long, denied him for so long — that at some point, he just stopped waiting.
And you didn’t blame him.
You hated him. God, you hated him.
But you understood. And you still loved him.
What a foolish game for a wallflower to grow on.
And when he finally came out of the bathroom, his hair still damp, towel slung over his shoulder, flashing you that soft, tired smile. You didn’t say a word. You just kissed him. Hard. Desperate. Like you hadn’t just been crushed to death by your heartbreak.
You grabbed his face, pulled him down, crushed your mouth to his like you were trying to rewrite history. Trying to pretend like you didn’t know what you knew. Trying to convince yourself that he was still yours. Kento froze for half a second, shocked by your sudden affection but then his hands snapped around your waist and he melted into you.
“Baby….” he gasped against your mouth, his voice needy, aching. “Fuck….. what’s gotten into you?”
You don’t say a word to him. Instead, you just clung to him. Like if you held him tight enough, like you could somehow undo the fact that he had already been touched by someone else. You let him take you that night. Hard. Rough. Desperate.
You let him fuck you like he hadn’t been able to for years, you let him do as he pleased. You let him crumble into you. His mouth on your neck, his hands fisting your hair, his voice breaking as he gasped over and over —“I love you. God, I love you.”
And you let him. Because in some fucked up way, you felt like you owed it to him, after making him suffer for so long. You spent years starving him, depriving him of life. So it was only fair that he found his comfort somewhere else.…Right?
Yet you stayed up after all that love making, alone.
No, you knew the correct answer all along.
But you were just too much of a fool to say it out loud.
AND JUST LIKE THAT, IT HAPPENS ALL OVER AGAIN. Once again, you were pregnant with your second child. It wasn’t planned. You never wanted any more children, after all that had happened. But it happened. Yet it wasn’t that surprising. In some ways, this was the only way you could find yourself taking revenge against him. To make him just as miserable as you again.
Just weeks after you found out about his cheating, after you spent night after night letting him have you in every way he wanted, desperately trying to reclaim him, trying to erase the touch of another woman from his skin. You found yourself standing in the bathroom again, clutching a positive pregnancy test. And your stomach dropped.
Because the second those two pink lines stared back at you, you knew. The cycle was about to repeat. The suffocating weight of motherhood. The slow erosion of your identity. The same cold distance that once consumed your marriage was about to happen all over again. And the worst part was that you couldn’t even blame anyone but yourself.
Because you let him touch you again. You wanted to feel wanted, and to take revenge. You wanted to erase every part of every other woman’s palm on his. You opened your legs for him, night after night, desperate to keep him anchored to you, desperate to make him forget about the other woman and now, you were paying the price.
And when you told Kento, he broke. But not in the same way he did the first time. Not with pure, unfiltered joy. Not with a beaming smile and hopeful eyes. No, this time, Kento’s face crumpled. Yet you know that look on his face. It was just like the first time.
“Baby—” his voice cracked. “You’re….. oh my god, you’re pregnant again?”
And the heartbreak in his voice killed you. Because you knew. You knew exactly what he was thinking. He was thinking we’re not ready. He was thinking not again. He was thinking I just got her back. And now, it is happening again. Yet, you just knew in the back of his mind, he was thinking this was his punishment. This is what he gets for being the worst man on the earth.
The sleepless nights. Postpartum depression. The intimacy issues. The slow unraveling of your marriage. And you could see it, the fear in his eyes. Yet, your husband Kento pushed it down. Because he was Kento fucking Nanami. He was a husband. A father. A provider. And regardless of how horrified he was, he refused to let you see it.
So he smiled.
Or at least, he tried to.
Yet you both knew the truth.
That smile felt like the biggest lie.
“That’s amazing, baby.” he choked, his voice strained. “Another baby. That’s… that’s incredible.”
And then he kissed you, soft and hesitant, like he was forcing himself to be happy. And you felt it. You felt the hesitation. The dread. The underlying regret. But you didn’t say anything. Because you were the one who let it happen. And just like that, the cycle began again.
Kento started working more. He said it was to provide for the baby, but you knew better. You knew it was because he was terrified. Because he was already bracing himself for what was about to come for you to spiral again, for you to shut down again, for you to stop loving him again.
You tried not to fall into the same pit you did last time. You tried to stay upbeat. You tried to keep loving Kento — loving him hard enough to make up for the fact that he once touched another woman. You tried to be a good wife. You tried to be excited about the baby.
But slowly… it just happened again.
The nausea. The fatigue. The aching loneliness when Kento came home late. The bitterness when you saw happy women on campus who still had their futures. The slow, creeping resentment every time you looked at your growing belly and thought I didn’t want this.
And worst of all, you started pulling away from Kento again. Not on purpose. But your body remembered. Your body associated pregnancy with trauma, with pain, with suffering and so it shut down. You couldn’t help it. Every time Kento touched you, your skin crawled. Every time he kissed you, you flinched. Every time he tried to make love to you, you just froze.
Kento felt it.
He felt you slipping away.
He felt your body turning cold again.
He felt the weight of your touchless nights,
He felt your silent dinners, your empty stares again.
And you knew.
You knew it was happening all over again.
But this time — it was worse.
Now you couldn’t stop thinking about her. The woman he had slept with. The one he turned to when you couldn’t love him the way he needed. And every time Kento touched you, you couldn’t help but lay there and wonder over and over again.
Did she feel warmer than you?
Did she kiss him like she wanted him?
Did she make him feel loved in a way you never could?
Kento could see it.
He could see the way you recoiled when he reached for you. He could see the distance growing between you again. He could see the guilt burning you alive. And he hated himself. Because the truth was, he never stopped loving you.
Even when he cheated. Even when he fucked another woman. It was never about love. It was never about you. It was about the ache. The desperation. The years of feeling like he was losing you and just needing something to hold onto. Now he felt like he was losing you again.
And deep down, he knew.
You were never coming back to him.
Not fully. Not the way you used to.
And Kento was slowly breaking under the weight of it.
Because no matter how much he loved you, it wasn’t enough.
It was never enough to keep you from falling out of love with him.
This is the world you gave birth to Nanami Kenshin.
LIFE GOES ON AS THEY USED TO SAY. Twenty five years, two whole decades and a half of that since you and Kento had first stepped into this chaotic life together. And somehow, despite everything, you made it.
You had raised two kids, a boy and a girl. Your Keiko and your Kenshin. They were both smart, both stubborn, both carrying that unmistakable sharpness in their eyes that mirrored your husband as much as their compassion had been garnered from your heart.
In all that agony you had come to know in your life, the pair kept you busy with almost everything they could think of. Troublemaking, homework, soccer games, dance recitals, late-night fevers. Everything about it is the messy, beautiful chaos of parenting that somehow keeps you moving forward.
And then there was Kento’s career, near thirty years as a veteran in the industry. He had gone from being the promising newcomer to a household name. Red carpets. Magazine covers. Award ceremonies where his face shone on giant screens as he walked up to accept yet another trophy. The world adored him. Respected him. Envied him.
And you were right there beside him for all of it.
The photographers always wanted you in the frame. His beautiful wife, standing gracefully at his side, draped in sleek designer dresses and glittering jewelry. They loved the way you smiled for the cameras, how your hand always rested delicately on his arm, how you played the part of the elegant, unwavering woman who had supported her husband through it all.
And for a while, you convinced yourself that this was enough.
That this life, this carefully curated image of family perfection, was what happiness was.
You learned to smile in interviews, to talk about Kento’s dedication as a father and how proud you were of him. You learned to navigate the world of high society — dinner parties with producers, mingling with other industry wives, slipping into that role of effortless charm and poise.
But behind all the glitz and glamour, it was lonely.
With two kids to raise, and a husband to care for, there was little for you.
There was no room for you to be the woman you are.
Kento was rarely home. Always on set, always in meetings, always flying across the country for some event or another. And when he was home, he was exhausted. Conversations grew shorter. His kisses felt rushed. The intimacy you’d once fought so hard to reclaim began to fade again — not because you didn’t want him, but because he was never there.
You kept yourself busy. Raising the kids. Managing the house.
Smiling at galas, posing for cameras, over and over again.
Playing the part of the perfect wife in a perfect marriage.
But sometimes, when the house was dark and the kids were asleep, you’d sit alone in the living room clutching an old photograph from years ago, back when Kento’s hair was still short and his smile still reached his eyes and wonder if this was all there was left.
And maybe it wasn’t enough.
But you told yourself it had to be.
Because you had already sacrificed too much to turn back now.
So, you didn’t think of anything when it broke out in the headlines.
Kento Nanami, the beloved actor, devoted husband, father of two had allegedly been caught cheating again after nearly twenty five years of marriage.
You sat at the kitchen table, having breakfast like normal. The morning sun spilled through the windows, the smell of eggs and coffee filling the air, and the faint sound of the television humming in the background.
“Sources say the woman in question is a production assistant from his latest drama series—”
You didn’t flinch.
You didn’t look up.
You just kept stirring your coffee, like the words meant absolutely nothing to you. Kento, on the other hand, was frozen. Fork halfway to his mouth. Face pale. Chest rising and falling like he was trying not to hyperventilate. And then, slowly, ever so carefully, he turned his head and looked at you.
“…Are you alright?” His voice cracked.
And that’s when you smiled.
You smiled, soft and easy. Like none of it mattered. Like you weren’t currently listening to the entire nation gossip about your husband’s infidelity. Like you weren’t being branded the foolish, pathetic wife who stayed after her husband cheated twice. Like you weren’t dying inside.
And with a voice far too calm, you said, “Why wouldn’t I be?”
Kento’s entire face crumpled.
Because he knew.
He fucking knew.
That wasn’t real. That smile.
That sweetness. That unbothered facade.
It was performative.
It was the same smile you gave him after your first child was born, when you were drowning in postpartum depression but still told him “I’m fine” over and over again.
It was the same smile you gave him one hundred times when he told you he was going to be late at home tonight, when he didn’t have to be.
And now, now you are doing it all over again. Feigning nonchalance. Feigning strength. Feigning normalcy. And it destroyed him to bits beyond what he could stand.
“…Baby.” his voice cracked, his fork clattering against his plate. “You don’t have to…. I mean, we can talk about it if you want. I’ll….I’ll explain everything. I swear to god, it’s not what they’re saying—”
You laughed so heartily.
A soft, almost amused laugh.
And you took a sip of your coffee, still smiling. “I don’t need you to explain anything, Kento.”
His stomach dropped. “Wh–what?”
You met his gaze and your smile never wavered. “It’s not the first time, is it?”
And fuck.
Fuck fuck fuck.
Kento’s mouth fell open. “Baby….no. It’s not like that….I swear I—”
“It’s alright.” You cut him off smoothly. Calmly. Almost too calmly. “Really. I don’t want an explanation.”
Kento visibly flinched. His heart was hammering so loud he swore you could hear it. “…You don’t?”
You shook your head, taking another bite of your eggs. “No. I’m just glad you had fun.”
And Kento lost it.
“Baby….” His voice cracked violently, his chair scraping against the floor as he immediately dropped to his knees beside you, clutching your thigh like his life depended on it. “Don’t do this. Don’t shut me out again. Please, baby. Please yell at me. Cry. Scream. Break things. Just…. don’t act like you don’t care. Please. Please, baby, I know you care—”
You laughed again.
But this time — it was hollow.
“I don’t.” you said plainly, popping a piece of toast into your mouth.
And that broke Kento completely, you were sure.
“No, no, that’s not true.” his voice shattered, his grip on your thigh desperate. “You love me. I know you do. You still love me. Please don’t….don’t act like you don’t….. I’ll fix it, baby. I swear to god, I’ll fix it, I’ll—”
“Fix it?” you echoed, your voice soft. Curious. “Like you did the first time?”
Kento fucking froze. “What?”
“You heard me.”
Because you never talked about it. Ever. After his first affair, you never once brought it up. You forgave him in the silence. Or at least, you pretended to. You shoved it down, pretended it never happened, and let Kento crawl back into your arms without consequence.
Now you were smiling at him like he was nothing more than a pitiful stranger. “Your ears work fine, don’t they?”
“…I don’t know what to say.” he choked. His hands were shaking. His throat constricted. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. Please….please just tell me what to do. I’ll fix it. I’ll do anything. Just please don’t—”
“Don’t what?” you asked softly, tilting your head.
The look in your eyes killed him.
“Don’t leave you?” you continued, your voice sickly sweet. “Don’t abandon you like you abandoned me when I needed you the most? Don’t make you feel like I loved someone else the way you made me feel for years?”
Tears burned his eyes. “Baby, please—”
“It’s fine, Kento.” You smiled again. “Really. I’m not mad.”
“You’re lying.”
“I’m not.” You sipped your coffee. “I’m not anything.”
And Kento completely unraveled.
Because he could see it.
The way you looked at him now. Like he was just a man. Not your husband. Not your Kento. Not the love of your life. Just a man who happened to share your bed, your house, and your children. And it killed him.
“Do you still love me?” he finally choked out, his voice so small.
And you froze.
Just for a second.
But then you smiled again.
Just as soft, sweet, cold as before.
“Of course, I do.”
And that was the sick part, wasn’t it?
You did. You still loved him. You loved him with your entire fucking soul. You loved him so much that it hurt. You loved him and you hated him with equal intensity. It was two sides of the same coin and it was tearing you apart.
And yet even if you do love him, you know what should be.
Kento didn’t deserve that love anymore.
And even if you have to act like you don’t love him, so be it.
Let him suffer the amount of suffering you had over that time.
So you kissed his forehead, brushed his hair back, and whispered. “You should finish your breakfast. You have work later.”
And then you stood up from your seat, cigarette on your lips.
And left him sobbing on the kitchen floor, lamenting.
You had errands left to run, after all.
A wife has too much to do, you know?
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authors note: yk i had to do the rest, so without further ado…
babydaddy!jjk headcanons because i couldn’t get nanami’s out of my head (𖦹ᯅ𖦹)
babydaddy!gojo
ᥫ᭡. you’re co-parenting with the most unserious man alive.
ᥫ᭡. he lets your kid stay up late, eat sweets for breakfast, and teaches them how to prank you. when you call to yell at him, he just laughs and says, “lighten up, sweets.”
ᥫ᭡. he’s also the dad who shows up to every school event, takes a million pictures, and brags about your kid to literally everyone.
ᥫ᭡. still hopelessly in love with you. will dramatically sigh and say, “we could be a family again, y’know” at least once a week.
babydaddy!geto
ᥫ᭡. was the fun, cool dad until he disappeared. you quite frankly don’t hear from him for a while, and then suddenly he’s back, all mysterious, like, “i had things to handle.” like sir, we have a child together (+ mimi and nana)
ᥫ᭡. your kid is a mama’s baby because geto was gone sooo long, and now he’s highkey lowkey jealous.
ᥫ᭡. makes up for lost time by being ridiculously attentive. picks them up, twirls them around, takes them on little adventures.
ᥫ᭡. “i missed so much. but i’ll never miss another thing again.” (and somehow, that promise includes you, too.)
babydaddy!ijichi
ᥫ᭡. the most nervous first-time dad. he read every parenting book, watched every video, and yet still panics when the baby cries.
ᥫ᭡. the type to say, “i don’t want to be a burden..” when he’s literally the most reliable of them all.
ᥫ᭡. is definitely still into you but would never say it. too respectful. too scared.
ᥫ᭡. your kid draws a picture of the three of you together, and he gets all emotional.
babydaddy!toji
ᥫ᭡. bare minimum parenting king.
ᥫ᭡.“why would i buy milk when you have a whole factory on your chest?”
ᥫ᭡. teaches your kid questionable survival skills, like how to climb out of any situation and the fastest way to steal food from a convenience store.
ᥫ᭡. surprisingly very soft when your kid hugs him out of nowhere. won’t show it, but you catch the way he holds on just a bit longer.
ᥫ᭡. loves you but he won’t beg.
ᥫ᭡. oh he’s definitely the dad that forces your kid to act younger than they are at restaurants
babydaddy!shiu
ᥫ᭡. acts like he doesn’t care, but he’s actually super involved.
ᥫ᭡. your kid is dressed in the freshest of fits because he refuses to let them look sloppy.
ᥫ᭡. shows up unannounced at your place like, “i came to see our kid, do i really need your permission?” but stays to fix things around the house.
ᥫ᭡. makes sure not to smoke infront of your kid.
ᥫ᭡. “you need anything?” sounds casual, but there’s some hidden meaning behind that question.
babydaddy!choso
ᥫ᭡. the sweetest, most protective father. your kid is basically glued to his hip.
ᥫ᭡. hates conflict. will do anything to keep the peace between you two because “the baby needs a calm environment.”
ᥫ᭡. hand-makes gifts for your kid, like cute little beaded bracelets and tiny scarves.
ᥫ᭡. it goes without saying, that he deeply misses being a family.
babydaddy!sukuna
ᥫ᭡. the deadbeat that somehow still has his kid obsessed with him.
ᥫ᭡. disappears for months, then randomly shows up with an expensive gift like, “what, you think i’d forget my own spawn?”
ᥫ᭡. lowkey jealous when your kid loves you more.
ᥫ᭡. gets surprisingly defensive when you call him a bad father. “i might not be perfect, but i’m trying dammit.”
ᥫ᭡. you’d have to be the one to get your family back together because he damn sure isn’t.
#jjk#jjk men#babydaddy jjk#jjk toji#jjk gojo#jjk geto#jjk choso#jjk ijichi#jjk sukuna#jjk shiu#jjk x reader#jjk x yn#ᥫ᭡.amorienomore#jjk dilfs#jujutsu kaisen#jujustsu kaisen x reader
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authors note: new style, new year, new me. i’m completely obsessed with this man so ofc im writing about him. ladies and gentlemen, allow me to introduce…
babydaddy!nanami headcanons (obvi bc i can’t stop thinking about him ^_^)
ᥫ᭡. nanami kento as a father? he’s a dream. a provider, a protector, a man who will cut your baby’s grapes into perfect quarters and always make it home by six to read them a bedtime story.
he acts all serious with everyone else but he’s absolutely the type to have matching pajamas with them. your toddler is in bluey themed pj’s, and so is he. no questions.
ᥫ᭡. the king of babywearing. will absolutely strap his kid to his chest and go about his day, running errands while their tiny hands are gripping his spotted tie.
ᥫ᭡. loves his kid more than any and everything but will absolutely NOT tolerate nonsense. if your toddler is throwing a tantrum over something unreasonable, he’ll just stare at them and go,
“are you done?”
(ofc he understands kids will cry tho)
ᥫ᭡. fussy baby? no problem. he’s rocking them with one arm and sending work emails with the other. ( our multitasking king.)
ᥫ᭡. has a whole routine for them. breakfast at 7:30 am, naprime at 12, bedtime at 7.
ᥫ᭡. the biggest softie, actually. if your baby so much as sneezes, he’s canceling plans and keeping them home all day. he says he just doesn’t want them to get worse and to be there if he does, but really, he just wants an excuse to cuddle them for hours.
and ofc like the gentleman he is, even after the breakup, he’s still showing up with groceries for you, making sure you’re okay, fixing things in your house like he never left. because let’s be real… he never really did.
ugh nanami kento the man that you are
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time to get back on my grind and try a new writing style 😼
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OMG OMG OMG AHHHHHHHHHH
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Broken Pieces
・˚˖𓍢ִ໋⋆‧₊˚ ࣪⋆ Growing up, you know how it feels to have daddy issues. So when you notice the same glazed look of abandonment and acceptance in Toji’s son, Megumi, you decide to try to fix that broken piece of soul as much as you can.
・˚˖𓍢ִ໋⋆‧₊˚ ࣪⋆Authors Note: this is going to contains some themes that may be triggering to some so please be aware this is kinda sad(??) contains themes such as… daddy issues, hint at y/n sleeping around as a coping mechanism, age gap between toji and y/n
—
Growing up, you used to dream of what it would be like to have a dad who actually cared. Someone who’d tuck me in at night, tell me you’re doing okay, give me a hug just because.
Growing up with an absent father doesn’t just hurt, it full on warps you. It makes you question your worth before you even understand what worth is. It teaches you that love is something you have to earn, something you have to fight for, and even then, it’s never guaranteed. Wanna know the worst part? You don’t even know what you’re fighting for anymore, just that you want to be acknowledged, to be seen.
You grew up with the constant quiet sting of rejection, like you were never good enough to deserve the simplest things. Things like a smile, a hug, his attention. You became a woman who learned to fill that empty space with whatever distractions you could find. Constant nights with men who wouldn’t even remember you. Constant nights of wobbling down the streets with an empty look on your face, a wrinkled dress and sore ankles. And when those distractions didn’t work, you learned how to ignore the ache inside, how to pretend it didn’t matter. How to act like you wasn’t craving something more.
And then came Toji.
Toji Fushiguro… your boyfriend. Your bad decision making skills took over again, you suppose. You don’t think you ever truly knew what you were getting into when you got involved with him. He just looked like you. Empty and cold. “Maybe we could fix each other?” You thought when you first met. Toji wasn’t just emotionally unavailable, it was his entirety. His presence in your life felt like a storm, wild, unpredictable, and often destructive. He was a man who was always on the move, always cold, always keeping people at arm’s length, always pushing me away when you needed him most. Yet pulling you close when he needed you most.
But you didn’t know how to be with someone who wasn’t like that, couldn’t remember a time you were ever with a good guy. Your whole life had been defined by the absence of affection, so why would you expect Toji to give it to you? You didn’t even know how to ask for it. You didn’t know how to say, “Hey, I need you. I need to feel like I matter.” Toji was your reflection, someone who kept his heart buried so deep that you couldn’t even see it. His heart as black as his hair and scarred as the scars that glittered his body. And you mirrored him, closing yourself off until you were just as broken and distant as he was.
“I don’t need you to stay,” Toji said as he tossed your clothes at you your first night with him. His words as cold as his hands on your skin. “I just needed you. Don’t get attached.”
And you didn’t know how to respond, because you’d already heard it so many times before. His voice echoed in my mind, just like the absence of your father’s. Your own worth reduced to something disposable, to something he could discard once when he got his fill. You should have realized this relationship would go nowhere but perhaps it was the look in his eyes that made you stay for as long as you have. A look of hurt and avoidance.
After a few months of us dating, he let you meet his son. Megumi.
You saw him, and you saw yourself.. that same emptiness in his eyes, the same weight on his shoulders from a father who was never there. The same loneliness, the same quiet acceptance of it. But at his age when you’d already drowned in it, Megumi… he was still holding on. He was still looking for something. You don’t know when it hit me, but you realized, you don’t want him to go down the same path you did.
So, you decided to try to help him.
You were a woman with daddy issues, looking for validation in the wrong places. It was like you didn’t know how to not hurt yourself. It was like you thought the pain was the only thing that made you feel alive but you knew you had to try for Megumi.
“Would you like some help with your homework, Megumi?" You asked one day, as he sat at the kitchen table, scribbling over a sheet of paper. I could tell he was frustrated, his brows furrowed and his fist clenched as if the words on the page were just as unreachable as the affection he wanted.
Megumi looked up, eyes wary and defensive but also tired. "I don’t need your help." He said staring me down.
You sigh softly. “I know you don’t need it. But I’m offering,” You said softly, pulling out the chair next to him. "I'm not trying to do it for you. Just… want to make it easier."
He hesitated, but after a beat, he slid the paper towards me. "Fine.."
Your eyes widen slightly and you smile softly before explaining the problems step by step to him. It was simple stuff, but it wasn’t the homework that mattered. It was just being there, like a presence that didn’t leave when it was inconvenient, like something stable in the chaos that followed us. You could see him relax a little, his shoulders dropping as I guided him through it. Maybe it wasn’t a miracle, but it was something. Something better than silence, better than emptiness.
The truth was, you’d become so accustomed to people leaving me that you didn’t know how to make them stay. But Megumi? He needed someone to stay. He needed someone who wouldn’t just disappear when things got hard. So, you did your best to be that person for him.
And even with Toji, you found myself silently craving a fraction of the attention you could never get from him. He had a way of looking at me, like you were just another distraction in his life, a passing moment and sometimes he saw you, truly saw you.
"You look like you need something," Toji said one night, glancing at me from across the room, his tone flat as ever. He was always like this.. distant, detached.
"Hm? It’s nothing." you muttered back, a bitter laugh escaping you, "Just thinking.”
Toji didn’t reply, his eyes flicking away, uninterested. And you felt that hollow ache again, the familiar sting of being unseen.
But then, there was Megumi. He might not say much, but he looked at me sometimes with those soft, hesitant eyes, like he knew something about me. Like he knew that you understood what it meant to be left behind.
And you couldn’t leave him behind like you’d been left.
So you kept showing up. You kept offering help, even when it felt like you were drowning in your own loneliness. Because, in the end, you had to believe it meant something to give that care to someone else. To make sure Megumi didn’t feel the same weight you did. You just needed to try and fix it before it was far too late.
Because, in the end, we all deserve to be seen. Even if the people who should have seen us never did.
#daddy issues#toji fushiguro#jjk toji#megumi fushiguro#modern au#angst#jjk x yn#toji x reader#toji x y/n#mother figure#age g4p
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OMGGGG I GOT HIM IN MY FIRST 20 PULLSSSS
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Soft Around the Edges
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₊˚。⋆❆⋆。˚₊ You convinced your husband to take some time off from work and enjoy sitting around your home eating cookies and cuddling on the couch when you start to notice a very welcome change.
°❀⋆.ೃ࿔*:・ Authors note: This is my first time writing in a long time. Any spaces for improvement is welcome and any requests are also welcome!
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You’re so used to seeing Nanami in his suit, looking all so very sharp and professional. Persuading Kento to take that well deserved break from work, was a great idea, the best you’ve had in a long time actually.
Winter was always the best time to unwind, spend time with your loved ones and eat.
But then, one lazy Saturday morning, you catch him in a loose t-shirt and sweatpants—relaxing on the couch with a cup of coffee, and a little belly sticking out after a big breakfast and suddenly, you’re falling harder than you thought possible.
This? This is Nanami Kento with a dad bod, and let me tell you, it is EVERYTHING.
The slight softness around his midsection where his abs lay, the little bit of extra warmth that comes with it, it makes him feel more human in the best way possible. It’s like, he’s still strong and capable, but he doesn’t feel the need to be perfect all the time—and that’s what makes him even more perfect in your eyes. Every stretch, every lazy sigh, every little moment where he’s completely relaxed and comfortable with who he is makes you more and more obsessed.
You love the way he casually slings his arm over your shoulder, his body a little fuller with a slight stubble coming in than the usual chiseled and clean shaven body, but it’s so much more real, so much more approachable and comforting. When he pulls you in close, you feel the warmth of his chest, the little squish on his stomach, and your heart melts because you’re realizing this man has seen it all, been through it all, and yet here he is, letting you love every inch of him.
It’s not just about the body—it’s about how he carries himself, how he treats you with such quiet affection, like nothing in the world matters more than your happiness. But let’s not pretend you don’t absolutely adore when he pulls up his shirt just a little bit to scratch his side, and you get a glimpse of that perfect, imperfect dad bod of his.
The man may not have his six-pack, but you’ve got him all wrapped up in your heart like the presents under the tree and that's way better than any abs could ever be.
#nanami kento#jjk x yn#dad bod#winter#nanami x reader#jjk nanami#nanami fluff#jjk kento#jujutsu kaisen#jujutsu nanami
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he’s died for her. lemuria has died for her. of course it has. she’s precious, she’s his beloved bride, she’s worth all of it. she smiles at him. it hurts. she has no idea how important she is. he holds her close and she soothes this heart of his, the same heart that she carved out of his his chest once before. it’s okay. he’s forgiven her. he’s forgiven her and she doesn’t remember. she doesn’t remember. the skeleton in that collector’s fountain tank, propped up like a pretty decoration. she tried to save that man. helped him. came to the studio to investigate it as though the collector didn’t deserve it. but it doesn’t matter. she has no idea, she looks at him with her chin jutted rolling her eyes at everything he says like he’s not her friend, like he’s not her employer, like he’snotthegodofthefuckingsea. they visit beautiful cities, filled with lush trees and flowers and algie used to love flowers. lemuria was just as beautiful as this city if not more before she, he, led it to its downfall. it’s such a romantic story they tell, how the lemurian trusted the sailor and let the kingdom be pilfered and torn apart, they tell the story as though it’s a charming fairytale and not his disturbing, bloody history. he was alive then, watching the light flicker out as he struggled to breathe, as the humans came in and took everything from them. she’s so soft, holds him so close, but not close enough for the nightmares to stop. he chose her. she doesn’t remember. doesn’t remember how he spared her more than once. how he chose her again and again and again and his people paid the price. how she could’ve been dead, just another body taken by the sea had he not appeared. had she not been so arrogant. the storm had every right to her life. and that night during the storm who gave her the nerve to fucking kiss him. he was the sea god. she was a lowly fucking human, claiming what wasn’t hers like humans always did. she wasn’t his lover. she wasn’t his heart. she was his follower. she was his sacrifice. she was nothing but a vessel for lemuria’s greatness and he should’ve killed her when he had the chance, should’ve plunged his hand in and taken that weak, unassuming heart and ripped it out of her corpse.
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only 26 pulls until i can get sylus… i need this so bad.
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before love and deepspace there was my addiction to love nikki. they both made me go broke too so they have that in common😓
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OMG I CAN REST PEACEFULLY I LITERALLY WENT BROKE BUT HES HOME GUYS YESSSS
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sylus.. pls just come home IM GOING BROKE TRYING TO GET U😓
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finally pulled one but i did not get who i wanted :(
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i have yet to get a SINGULAR pull from this event. i’m about to go insane.
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