bunbun-mochi
bunbun-mochi
Dia
228 posts
Age: 23 | MDNI | Request Open Delulu is the Solulu to my Prolulu pfp artist @ppp_015
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 7 days ago
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Im not sure whether to break up with Raf. I lost my 50 50 to raf. I wanted Raf, but with a different Raf. I failed successfully?
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 9 days ago
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Unpopular opinion: the new Raf myth is hot, but my favorite myth is still abysswalker. The new myth would've top every single myth if Raf used his hip sway in good use. Iykyk.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 1 month ago
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I can send the hands but I dont have the money to send abs (bc i can't buy that sexy outfit).
Whoever has lads can you send me pictures of each LI’s hands and abs I need the references for a drawing and a fanfic I’m writing and I no longer have enough storage to play the game.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Rain and Tears
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You once said that people liked being under the rain because no one could see them cry. Zayne caught you under the rain one day.
୨ৎ. Zayne x Reader (MC)
୨ৎ. Tags: hurt/comfort, fluff, emotional hurt, no y/n.
୨ৎ. Word count: 707.
୨ৎ. Requested by PAL.
୨ৎ. Masterlist ♡ Request a fic (read more for current status)
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As you stepped out of Akso Hospital gate, it began to rain. You looked up, to where the sky was as gray as your mood. The cold, clear drops cut into your skin. And you realized you were crying. 
The warm beads that spilled from your eyelids became frigid. Slowly, strolled down the sidewalk in your Hunter outfit, which was slightly tattered and blood-stained. In the distance, a column of black smoke rose on the horizon, marking the location of the surprise attack right in the city of Linkon.
Upon receiving the news, you rushed to the scene. But no matter how hard you fought against the Wanderers, you could not ensure the protection of all residents. Among those who were transported to the hospital, a little girl could not make it.
You understood that it was not your fault, and the doctors at Akso Hospital did their best. Yet you couldn't stop thinking that if you had run just a little faster, if you had been just a little stronger, things may not have turned out this way.
You waited in the hospital corridor for many hours. Then the physicians emerged from the emergency room with dreadful news.
You reassured Zayne you were alright and could walk home on your own, but every step you took was unsteady and exhausting. The mental and physical burden was overwhelming. At last, unable to move any further, you dropped down on the sidewalk and burst into tears.
The rain became very heavy. You let your feelings dissolve into the chillness of the rain. You lose track of time while sitting there. Once you had calmed down, you raised your head and saw an umbrella covering above. 
Dr. Zayne was standing there. The umbrella provided just enough coverage for you, so his casual clothes' shoulders were somewhat damp. You hurriedly wiped away the tears and tried to rise up, but it seemed like there was no strength left in your body.
Zayne leaned down in front of you. He placed his warm palm on your cheek and softly caressed it. He said:
“Is this how you get home by yourself?”
You forced a smile. Zayne must have felt it was fake too.
“I was just going home… I just…” You tried to keep your voice from trembling, but you left the sentence unfinished. Zayne stroked your face and said:
“You once said that people liked being under the rain because no one could see them cry. Is that why you’re sitting here alone?”
You knew that sacrifices were inevitable in every battle, just as Zayne knew that he could not save everyone. You realized that you were both going through the same thing. If you blamed yourself for not being able to save that little girl, then he was also suffering by witnessing his little patient pass away. Perhaps the only difference was that you could simply sit here and cry, but Zayne would not.
"What about you?…" You grasped Zayne's hand. "When you feel stuck due to circumstances beyond your control... What would you do?"
On such a dreary day, Zayne’s eyes brought rays of warmth. He understood exactly what you were saying and why you were sobbing in the first place.
"I'd do what I can control," Zayne replied. "I'll keep working and researching, so that when I come across the same situation, I can handle it."
“That’s truly something Doctor Zayne would say…” You remarked. No matter what, you could always count on his steadfastness and rely on him.
“So you will continue working now?” You asked, then received a shake of his head from him.
“My shift has just ended. For now, I have a special patient to take care of.”
Zayne leaned towards you. His warmth enveloped you and raised you up. He lifted you up with one arm, resting you on his shoulder while the other hand held onto the umbrella.
“Let me take you home.”
You did not protest. Your arms wrapped around Zayne’s neck to maintain balance. You leaned against him, who had always been steady enough to keep you from falling. Thanks to Zayne, you knew you did not need to hide your tears in the rain alone any longer.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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CALLLLLEEBBBBB!!!!!!
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I. SWEAR. TO GOD.
I'm divorcing Caleb. Pulled 65 times and got nothing. 65. TIMES. This mf is dead to me
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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I'm divorcing Caleb. Pulled 65 times and got nothing. 65. TIMES. This mf is dead to me
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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LADS: *release a super fluff, cute memory*
Fandom: *reminds people of the heartbreaking lore/story/whatever canon the game gives*
Me: O_O PLEASE, LET THEM BE HAPPY! LET ME BE HAPPYYYYY
(No hate, just crying my eyes out)
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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calebs the type to ASK you to do your makeup routine on him just to see the look on ur face when ur so close and so concentrated.
and to top it off, he’d look prettier in it than you do and it would piss you off. his eyes sparkling a little extra with the long lashes, his lips pulling you in as they shined with gloss. his cheeks pulled up with the warmest smile as they reflect a soft pinky blush back at you. his hair pulled back with some sort of fluffy headband, leaving some strands sticking straight up and a few strands falling into his face.
and he’s just happy to be there. with that stupidly gorgeous dopey smile on his face.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Maps headcanons -
🧡 Going to bed before Caleb fluff
Details: 200 words of pure Caleb fluff and pillow talk.
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If you’ve gone to bed before Caleb, he always starts the same way. Quiet footsteps, the kind that barely disturb the air. He leans in, and without a word, presses his forehead to yours—just for a moment. Measuring your warmth. Checking if you’re running hot, or if maybe he just missed you that much.
Then his lips find your temple. A kiss like punctuation. Gentle. Necessary.
If you’re curled on your side, he doesn’t hesitate. He slides in behind you like he was always meant to be there. An arm over your waist, chest to your back. No space left between.
He kisses the nape of your neck, slow and careful at first. Then again. And again. Soft, scattered kisses, like he can’t help himself—like your skin is gravity and his mouth’s just answering the pull.
He tries not to wake you—he really does—but between those kisses, the words slip out anyway, broken up by breath and lips against your skin.
“You looked so peaceful…”
kiss
“…I almost stayed in the doorway.”
kiss
“You make this place…”
kiss
“…feel like home.”
kiss
“I don’t know what I did…”
kiss
“…to deserve you.”
kiss
“Even your breathing…”
kiss
“…sounds like a song.”
Each word barely more than a whisper. Each kiss a confession. And he’s still trying not to wake you—but gods, he needs you to know.
Just in case you’re listening.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Hi love! I love your stories on sylus x innocent mc. Love how cute mc is. Can you do innocent mc having anixtey after having a nightmare and sylus came to comfort her
I’m Here - Sylus x Innocent Fem Reader
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A/N: Hi love, thank you for requesting and I know this might be a short one but I hope that you enjoy it!!
Disclaimer: This work is completely fiction. I do not own the images nor the characters or you (the MC). All images were taken from Pinterest.
N109 Zone - 1:48 AM (2nd POV)
It had been days since Sylus left for a “business trip”. In the beginning you were fine with it because at the very least Mephisto was with you, keeping you company.
The first few days, you would tidy around the place, change a few things to make it not so dark and gloomy. You even learned some new recipes you’ve always wanted to try.
Sylus was only able to call you the first few times but when he was going deeper at the location he was at, he deeply regret to inform you that the signal was terrible but he would try his best to update you.
Now, nearly a week later, you haven’t been able to sleep well. Your overthinking brain created multiple different scenarios and thoughts that were slowly consuming you from the inside out.
Oftentimes you would wake up in the middle of the night and hugging Sylus’ pillow as you buried yourself deeper under the blankets of his bed in his room.
Today was no difference than the past several days. It was in the middle of the night, you were reading a book, thinking that it would help you fall asleep earlier.
It was just some other romance stories that you’ve been reading. But instead of helping you fall asleep, it made you overthink even more.
What if Sylus got hurt? That can’t be right? He’s Sylus. He doesn’t get hurt easily. But what if Luke and Kieran were not around and Sylus was outnumbered? Maybe they attacked him in the daylight because he is somewhat weakened in broad daylight.
In your sleep, you dreamt how Sylus was hurt and you couldn’t do anything to save him. It was as if someone or something was holding you down, not allowing your body to move.
You were screaming, crying, trying your best to get out of the grip, twisting and turning until you heard his voice.
“Hey, I’m here. Wake up for me sweetie. Everything’s okay” you heard his voice, his deep baritone voice that was calming despite what others think of him
You kept twisting and turning until you felt large but comforting hands on your arms followed by the baritone voice that calmed you. In an instant you jolt awake, your body jerking forward as you gasped for air, trying to stabilize your breathing.
In an instant you were pulled into a warm hug, your instantly relaxing, knowing who it was and the voice followed the hug confirms it. “I’m here sweetie. You’re okay”
Your chin was gently lifted up and you saw him. You saw Sylus in the flesh. His red orbs were gentle and soft with a hint of worry in them. You slowly lifted your hand and caressed his jaw making him hum.
“I’m here sweetie. I’m here. You take a deep breath for me yeah? You can do that right?” Sylus asked and you nodded, following his breathing
“That’s good sweetie. You’re doing good. I’m here. I’m sorry I left you for so long. I tried to contact you, I swear. I’ll make it up to you” Sylus’ voice was shaking a bit, his hold on you was a bit tighter
“I was worried about you. I dreamt about you. I dreamt you were hurt and I couldn’t save you. I was so scared. What if something happened to you? I can’t Sy. Please don’t leave that long with no update” you were shaking yourself, you turned around and hugged Sylus, burying your face in the crook of his neck like a koala
“There’s nothing to be worried about sweetie. I won’t ever leave you. I promise” Sylus kissed the side of your head long enough before he placed your head under his chin. “I’m here. I’m alive. Nothing will take me away from you. You’re my reason to keep going now and I would always be here for you” Sylus kissed your temple, caressing your cheek, making you both smile
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Without You
What will you do now?
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It was lonely these days. You couldn’t stand the silence. You missed him…everything about him. Going through his things was the hardest part. The endless portraits he painted that were to resemble any time you’ve spent together. The Polaroids were the hardest to go through each one had a smile even if it was the faintest one.
His place was going up for sale soon. You didn’t want it to but you had no choice. Talia couldn’t bear to live in it not without him. It was up to you now. Thomas was in charge of his paintings but there was one you intended to keep. It was one of the beach, the colors so different it filled you with an emotion you couldn’t put your finger on. All you knew was that you wanted to keep it.
“I miss you.” You sob holding the painting close, your tears creating a small puddle on the floor. “What am I going to do without you?”
Your heart wrenches as you wail and as if the sea heard you, the waves become violent, matching your cries.
You don’t stop, you don’t breathe, you just wail. In a way this is the closest you’ve ever felt to him since he left you.
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The video rewinds for nth time. The same scrunch in his nose, the same glint in his eyes as he wipes icing on you, the same laughter afterwards, and that smile. The smile that lit up your whole world. The smile you thought you swore you would never live without. Now you’re forced to live that reality.
You’ve beat yourself up over it over and over again. Everyone said it wasn’t your fault but you knew it was. You should’ve listened to him and now he was gone. Curling up in your bed with his shirt to your nose was all you had these days. Your colleagues tried to get you to come out and get your mind off of it but they knew you wouldn’t leave.
At times you were in denial. As long as you had your memories of him, he was there. He wouldn’t leave you alone he promised. This ache would go away soon, at least that’s what you told yourself. He would be home soon from a long shift and kiss your forehead. He would.
‘Honey, it’s not your fault.’ A daily reminder from his mother. A message that you received everyday. No matter how much you heard it you couldn’t believe it. You ignore it and replay the video once again. It was just you and him. Forever.
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The base was too quiet and you couldn’t stand it. Not today anyway. The clicking of your shoes echo not another sound to accompany it. Your face was stoic as you made your way down the hall. No destination just walking, clearing your head. You were angry to say the least.
You walk past it once again. It was always in the same place so why did it bother you so much today. You walk backwards to face it. Today you had to face it. The portrait of you and him. It was a live portrait from your wedding, the look of love consumed you. It was all in vain anyway.
Your skin boiled with anger, resentment over something neither of you could control. You ripped it off the wall tossing it to the ground. You wanted to smash it, destroy the only happy memory that remained in this hellish place. You don’t but you kick the frame causing it to crack. Your heart beating irregularly making you take a deep breath and fix your suit.
“I hate you for leaving me.” You mumble looking down at the portrait. You feel a lump form in your throat, “but I still love you. I’ll always love you.” You whisper before walking away. Onychinus wasn’t going to run itself, being the new boss wasn’t easy but you refused to let his hard work be for nothing.
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You put the pot down with a smile on your face. A feast was prepared and you couldn’t wait for everyone to dig in. You were proud of your work, everything smelled heavenly. You took the oven mitts off and hung up your apron before sitting down.
Then everything hit you all at once. Your smile was wiped as you swiped everything off the table. Glass shattered and food smeared on the floor. You screamed and wailed as you threw everything in sight. Your chest heaved rapidly as you stood and looked around at the mess you made.
Simone, Tara, and Jeremiah freeze watching everything unfold. They knew you were dealing with Xavier’s death in your own way but this was out of your character. You were bottling up your emotions on the matter because you didn’t want to feel it. You didn’t want to reminisce or think about him not being there. You refused to believe he left you on this stupid planet alone.
“You promised…” You whimpered as you fell to your knees. Your hands cover your face as you sob and hiccup. Bless your friend’s hearts, they stayed for you, cleaning up your grief. Tara stayed with you as you grieved under the night sky. You stared at the stars watching them twinkle. He may not be there physically but you knew he was there in every twinkling star in the sky.
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You did it. You took down Ever and anyone who caused Caleb any harm. You wanted to feel satisfaction but it wasn’t enough. You wanted to blow sky haven sky high. He wouldn’t want that, he wouldn’t want you to create enemies for yourself.
How did you get here? All this anger and resentment sent you on a rampage. You were creating a name for yourself. You couldn’t sleep knowing he was gone. Everyone had to feel what you felt that night. You took your gloves off and threw them to the ground as you descended into the darkness. When you reached the bottom a sick smile made its way onto your face.
The leader of Ever, on his knees and tied up. You lift his head with your foot, his face was already battered and bruised. You were reveling in your victory. He took everything from you so you were going to return the favor. A sickly laugh leaves your throat, a lump from grief forming. After this it was all over.
“You took everything from me. It’s only fair I do the same thing to you.” You swing your leg forward causing him to cough painfully. You roughly grab his hair yanking him towards you, your voice sinister as you spoke, “I’ll make you feel everything he did.” You throw his head down, a thud sounding through the area. You were going to deal with your grief your way. Your way is best.
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Do we love it or do we love it? I love writing angst.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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🧡Caleb - Five Years Later
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The third in a series of stories exploring MC’s return after five years of silence. Others are coming soon — links will be added as they’re published.
Original ask that sparked this continuation.
Sylus | Rafayel | Zayne | Xavier (coming soon)
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CW/TW: Grief / Loss of a loved one, Terminal illness, PTSD themes, Emotional trauma, Mentions of death / implied past death, Medical procedures / hospitals, Restraints (medical context), Panic attacks / nightmares, confinement / loss of agency, Non-consensual medical intervention, Self-worth / guilt issues, Power imbalance (emotional), Non-graphic violence, Brief medical body horror, Touch-starvation / intimacy after trauma, Bittersweet tone, heavy emotional intensity, Hope & love, but not always soft
Pairing: Caleb x former partner!you Genre: Sci-fi drama, heartbreak and healing, soul-deep devotion. Heavy on angst, soft on reunion. Enemies to… something more broken and beautiful. MC Context: You disappeared five years ago. He never forgave you. Now you’re back — with a secret that’s killing you slowly. Summary: Admiral Caleb was forged in war and tempered by loss — and you were the one wound that never healed. When fate throws you back into his orbit, neither of you are ready for what resurfaces. Letters, graves, rain-soaked rooftops, and the love that refuses to die quietly. Word Count: 8.4K — stand-alone… for now. 🥀 This story was loosely inspired by Caleb’s latest Myth. Just a touch of that vibe, y’know?
Author’s Note: Okay, full confession — I cried from the first word to the very last. Maybe it’s just me (I’ll admit, Caleb is my soft spot). Or maybe… it just hit something. Either way, I’d love to hear what you think.
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The anniversary of Josephine’s death — and Caleb’s own — landed squarely on an unscheduled visit to Lincon City.
The admiral rarely returned. Not unless duty bared its teeth and dragged him back. Too painful. Too empty. The wounds too fresh, even now.
He had once been Colonel Caleb of the Farspace Fleet. Now, promoted to the soulless rank of Admiral, he moved like a ghost through corridors lined with medals and silence. But today… something clawed at him. A compulsion. A tremor from a buried place.
He bought lupines. Tall, excessive, dignified in a way grief never is. The kind you buy for someone who will never see them. And then he walked — alone — to the cemetery.
He had only been here once before. With you.
Josephine’s grave was strangely well-tended. No weeds. Edged clean. A vase of pink lilies — fresh, impossibly so — sat nestled against the stone like someone had just set them down and whispered something soft and final. Her favorite flowers. He remembered.
His first thought: the groundskeepers. Maybe the city did something for the dead on anniversaries. Some quiet bureaucratic kindness. But that didn’t explain the lilies. How would they know?
His eyes scanned the black headstone. “Josephine,” carved in solemn, obedient serif. A name, a dash, two dates, and silence. His grandmother. Gone six years.
She hadn’t died of age. The blast had taken her.
But you — you were different.
Five years. Five years since you vanished. Gone not like a candle snuffed, but like smoke ripped from the air.
He had never accepted it. Not really. Some part of him believed you were taken. That you had been forced to go.
Because the truth — the one that stared back at him in sleepless nights and shattered mirrors — was that you did leave. You walked away. No message. No farewell. Just absence.
The storm was building in the clouds above, heavy and low like judgment. Thunder sat unspoken just beyond the hills, crouching. Caleb stood still, arms at his sides, as the sky thickened.
Why?
It was a question that never left. A question with a thousand answers. Each one sharper than the last.
The scent of wet earth rose in the air. Ozone, crackling like something electric and cruel. His hand twitched toward his wristwatch. He was due back. His itinerary was brutal. The war waited for no one — not even the grieving.
He knelt, placed the bouquet down with the softness of ritual. A last gesture. A futile offering.
Then his eyes drifted. To his own gravestone.
There it was. Cold. Familiar. His name, etched beneath hers, waiting for its second date.
And something else. A white envelope.
Untouched by time. Unsullied by rain or rot. Resting gently, like it had grown there.
His breath caught.
The lilies. The letter. The impossible coincidence.
Then the first drop hit — heavy, warm — against his cheek. A second, on the envelope. Then more.
Drip. Drip-drip. Drip—  Draaip.
The kind of rain that doesn’t fall, but descends. Like judgment. Like memory.
Caleb stepped forward. One foot. Then another. His boots sank slightly into the earth, as if the ground resisted.
He reached out — hands trembling, trembling — like the time he pulled an FS-90 out of a death spiral back at the Academy, nose brushing the snow-capped ridges of the mountains peaks.
He lifted the envelope. It was light. Too light. But on it — one word, scrawled in handwriting he knew too well.
Caleb.
Nothing more.
He shoved it into the inner pocket of his uniform, as though it were explosive. As though it might burn through the fabric and into his chest.
And just like that — as if spurred by some instinct he couldn't name — he turned on his heel and walked fast, too fast, back toward the car.
His heart didn’t race. It pounded.
Like thunder.
The drive to the airfield felt like a lifetime, though the roads were mercifully clear. No evening traffic, no pointless delays. The driver, attuned to the admiral’s mood, pressed hard on the accelerator, but still — Caleb tapped his fingers against the armrest with restless urgency, the motion sharp and impatient.
The envelope continued to burn in his chest.
Rain traced thick, winding rivers down the window, a slow, rhythmic descent like tears he never shed for you. When you left, it wasn’t just his heart that broke. It was his soul, his body, his being. Everything cracked and caved inward — except his eyes. Those remained stubbornly dry.
Now, though… he was close. And that made him angry.
Furious, even.
It infuriated him that just as he had begun to stitch some version of his life back together — a life without you, without your voice, your touch, your name — you reappeared. Like a ghost. Too close to ignore, too far to hold.
If you had wanted to return, you would have come back. Not like this. Not through riddles and shadows and silence. You would’ve stood at his door, or on a tarmac, or behind him in some briefing room like the world hadn’t ended. And he — damn him — he would have forgiven you. Instantly. Because that’s who he was. That’s what you had always counted on.
And that was what made him want to scream.
He didn’t want to forgive. He didn’t want to read your damned letter, to parse your reasons, your pleas, your desperate little words asking to be understood.
He didn’t want to analyze your cruelty. He didn’t want to empathize with it.
For the first time in five years, Caleb felt like he could finally, truly erase you. Not forget — never forget — but cut you out like rot. And live with the absence.
The letter pressed against his chest like a bullet. He placed his palm over it, broad and unsteady, as though trying to keep it from puncturing skin. As if it hadn’t already pierced him, deep and final.
The only sane choice would be to throw it out the window. Let the wind take it, let the rain dissolve it, let the world carry it into the dark.
Maybe you hadn’t even meant for him to find it. Maybe this was a confession to no one. A whisper into the void. Maybe it wasn’t meant for him at all — just for yourself.
To ease the weight.
To breathe again.
Selfish.
Selfish to write it. Selfish to hope for release, when he was still walking in agony, flesh and blood wrapped around something broken.
He didn’t want you to breathe.
He didn’t want you to be free of the pain, not when he was still wearing it — every day, every night, every silence between heartbeats.
How dare you write to him?
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It was beneath an admiral to take the controls.
But today, Caleb didn’t care.
Protocol could burn. Chain of command, procedure, rank — all of it. He needed to feel the illusion of control again, even if it came in the form of a military jet barely older than some of the crew still stationed on the tarmac.
He didn’t ask the pilots to stand down. He ordered them. One glance at his face, and none of them argued.
The rain was steady now, carving grooves into the tarmac like old scars. The cockpit smelled of steel, vinyl, and cold systems spinning up to life.
Caleb slid into the pilot’s seat. No ceremony. No reverence. Just quiet, deliberate motion. The envelope — that stupid, unbearable envelope — landed in the co-pilot’s seat like a stone slab. Heavy enough, he thought, to drag the aircraft down with him.
And maybe that would’ve been for the best.
He ran the preflight checks by muscle memory.
Fuel quantity. Sufficient. Confirmed crossfeed valve closed.
Hydraulic pressure. Green. Full.
Flight controls. Surfaces free and correct — elevator, rudder, ailerons.
Navigation systems. Online. INS aligned. No drift.
Avionics. Check.
Oxygen. Flow normal, regulators armed.
Engine start. Ignition armed. Starter sequence began. One engine, then the second — turbines spun up with that low whine that sounded too much like a scream if you listened the wrong way.
He couldn’t breathe. But he was going through the motions.
Flight clearance received. Tower approved for immediate departure.
The jet eased down the taxiway, engines rumbling like restrained violence beneath him. His hands on the throttle were steady. Too steady.
Takeoff checklist. Flaps set. Trim neutral. Brakes released.
He pushed the throttles forward.
The aircraft responded like it wanted to run. Acceleration pressed him back into the seat. Rain lashed the windscreen. The moment the wheels left the tarmac, the ache in his chest twisted tighter.
There. He was airborne.
And it didn’t help. Not like it used to.
Altitude climbed. Ten thousand. Twenty. Forty. Cruising.
He stabilized at 37,000 feet and did something he almost never allowed himself: he engaged the autopilot.
The moment the system took over, he tore off the harness with a sharp, frustrated motion. The metal buckle clattered against the seat.
His hand reached for the envelope.
It was still warm from being pressed to his chest. He turned it over in his fingers, letting the edge bite into his skin. He very nearly tore it in half.
But he didn’t.
Instead, he broke the seal, carefully, precisely — like disarming a mine.
And there it was. That handwriting. Your handwriting.
Messy. Crooked. Rushed. Impatient. Every letter a little too hard, as though you’d nearly punctured the page. You had always gripped your pen like it was the only thing anchoring you to the world. You hadn’t changed.
For a long moment, Caleb didn’t read. He just stared at the shapes of the words. The loops and slants. Like he was watching you from the other side of interrogation glass — close enough to touch, unreachable all the same.
And then he started.
Once. Again. A third time.
Each pass scraped deeper, like reading the report of his own autopsy.
His hand trembled. He didn’t even realize he was breathing too fast until the cockpit hissed a low-pressure warning. He ignored it.
He slammed the harness back across his chest and keyed the comms.
“Control, this is Delta-Two-Alpha requesting vector for immediate return.”
There was a pause.
“…Confirm that, Delta-Two-Alpha. Reason for return?”
He took the yoke again, flicked autopilot disengage with a sharp tap. The jet jerked slightly, now fully under his hand.
“Command directive,” he said flatly.
Another pause.
“Understood. Return approved. You’re clear for turn on heading zero-one-five.”
Caleb didn’t wait. He threw the aircraft into a steep bank, cutting through the clouds like a blade.
He knew where to find you. He had known before he stepped into the cockpit. He had known standing at the grave, the envelope still untouched.
But he hadn’t wanted to find you then.
Now?
Now he didn’t have a choice.
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The viewing deck of the Linkon TV Tower was nearly empty.
Closing time was drawing near, but the rain had chased away what few tourists and visitors remained. You stood at the railing in a long lavender raincoat, hood pulled deep over your head. The fabric clung to your arms and back, soaked through. Your sneakers were long past wet, the chill of the concrete seeping into your bones. But you didn’t move. Didn’t shift. As if the weather had pinned you here in time, or maybe memory had.
The city below had disappeared — swallowed by fog, by stormclouds, by everything that refused to be seen. No headlights, no stars. Just the endless roar of rain and the cold sting of being the last one left.
Your fingers rested lightly on the metal bar. Your eyes were turned upward, into the vast nothing. Watching clouds drift across an invisible sky. You might have stood there till morning, if not for the footsteps behind you.
Slow. Measured. Not security. Too quiet.
“I would give a lot to know what you’re thinking right now,” said a voice too worn to belong to the man you once loved.
You turned slowly.
Caleb stood a few paces away, still in uniform. The rain hadn’t spared him. His hair was damp, the shoulders of his coat dark with water. But he stood like the storm couldn’t touch him. Like it wouldn’t dare.
“I didn’t think you’d come,” you said.
“I almost didn’t.”
You smiled — not from joy, but from pain that needed a face.
“I thought maybe you’d moved on by now,” you said. “Married. Found peace.”
“I’m not built for peace,” he said flatly.
“No,” you murmured, “you weren’t. But I hoped... maybe you’d become someone who was.”
He took a step forward, his boots clicking against the wet metal. “You hoped I’d forget you.”
“I hoped you’d survive me.”
The words hit. You saw it — the smallest shift in his jaw, the flicker in his eyes. But his voice stayed calm.
“You knew I wouldn’t.”
You didn’t deny it.
“I wrote the letter because I needed to say it. Not because I thought you'd ever read it.”
“You didn’t want me to.”
You hesitated. “No.”
“Then why leave it where I’d find it?”
Another silence. Then: “Because I wanted to believe you wouldn’t come.”
Caleb’s expression didn’t change, but his gaze sharpened. The air between you grew tighter, like a pressure drop before impact.
“I read it,” he said.
Your breath caught. “I know.”
“I know everything now.”
You nodded.
He didn’t shout. He didn’t accuse. But his voice was a blade dragged slowly across flesh.
“You could’ve told me. You could’ve stayed.”
“I couldn’t breathe, Caleb.” You didn’t mean to say it out loud — but the truth had a weight of its own. “You loved me like I was something to guard. Not someone to hold.”
“I was trying to keep you safe.”
“And I was trying to live.”
His lips parted, as if to argue — but nothing came. Because you both knew: you were right. And so was he.
You took a step closer, rain dripping from your sleeves.
“I didn’t want you to be there when it started. I didn’t want you to watch me fade.”
“And now?”
“Now it’s too late.”
Caleb looked at you like you were a puzzle he used to know how to solve. Like something once sacred that had rewritten itself in a language he couldn’t read.
“I’m not asking you to forgive me,” you said.
“Good.”
Your breath hitched — not from the cruelty of it, but from the honesty.
“I just wanted to see you again,” you whispered. “Once. Before...”
You didn’t finish. You didn’t need to.
He stepped closer. This time, the space between you nearly vanished. But he didn’t reach out.
“You always ran when it got quiet,” he said.
“And you never let anything rest.”
He didn’t deny it.
“I hated you,” he said, voice rough. “For five years, I hated you for leaving. For taking my soul with you and vanishing into nothing.”
You closed your eyes.
“And now?”
He hesitated.
Then: “Now I just hate that there’s nothing left to save.”
The rain didn’t stop. Neither of you moved.
But something broke, quietly — not between you, but inside you both.
And maybe that was the beginning. 
Or the end.
He stepped closer. Not to you — no. To the railing.
Leaning casually, almost carelessly, over the edge, he stared down into the city’s abyss. The lights below were blurred by fog, rain, and altitude — a slow-motion fall into nothingness. Even resting like that, shoulders relaxed, head tilted slightly as he looked down, Caleb seemed impossibly distant. Removed.
Admiral.
Not just a rank anymore. Not a role. It had consumed him — the strictness, the cold efficiency, the discipline etched into every movement. He was the title now. All calculation, no softness. All control, no warmth. A man weaponized by grief, then sanctified by command.
“Do you remember the last time we were here?” you asked quietly, your voice fragile, almost drowned out by the rain.
He didn’t answer at first.
You studied his face — the years had been merciful to him in the way they only are to men shaped by war. Just over thirty. A trace of silver at the temples. Skin clean-shaven, jaw locked, cheekbones sharp enough to cut glass.
He looked like marble come alive. Cold, perfect, untouchable.
You wanted to reach out. Just to touch his face. To feel warmth. To remind yourself he was still made of skin, not armor.
“We saved a lot of people that day,” you added, almost to fill the silence. “From Wanderer.”
“I remember,” he said, his voice low. “On the train ride here, you fell asleep on my shoulder. There was some romantic song playing on loop — too sweet to ever be real.”
You smiled, barely. It hurt. “Caleb… would you still do it now? Jump like that? Into the void. As if death is something you can bargain with. Something you can command to pause.”
He tilted his head, still watching the city below.
“I can stop a fall. I can control flight paths. Bend gravity to my will. But not death. If I could…” He paused. His voice dropped lower, quieter. “I wouldn’t be here.”
When he turned to you, the change was surgical. A full turn of his body, attention locked on yours. His eyes scanned your face with precision, not feeling.
He looked at you like he was trying to remember.
Like five years had burned away not just the love, but the memory of it.
“Tell me,” he said, “do you think I’ll be able to save you this time?”
The question landed like a shard of ice in your spine. You flinched — not visibly, but inside, where it counted.
There was something wrong in his voice. Not anger. Not desperation. Just… wrong. Like he was rehearsing something he didn’t understand.
“I’m not asking you to save me,” you said. “I never wanted that. I never wanted to be your project. Your fragile rose behind glass — something that, if shattered, would take your whole world with it.”
He didn’t reply. But he looked away. Not down. Not up. Just… away.
And then — a sound behind you.
A door creaked. Footsteps, hesitant. The voice of someone too young, too aware.
“I— I’m sorry— sir— admiral— I didn’t— The tower’s closed, I—” The poor security guard stumbled over every word as he recognized the face that had appeared in military reports, field briefings, and news feeds. The ghost in the sky. The man who never fell.
Caleb turned slightly toward him, not quite sighing — more like resetting. 
“Where are you staying?”
You blinked. “Caleb—”
He raised a hand, not unkindly, but final.
“Where.”
You swallowed. “The Midland Motel. Down by the shuttle terminal.”
He said nothing, just nodded once and began walking. You followed.
You knew you shouldn’t. But you were too tired to argue. Too wet, too cold, too broken.
He didn’t offer his coat. Didn’t say a word. Just pressed the call button for the lift and waited in silence.
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The car ride was quiet. The city blurred past in gray, streaked neon. His vehicle — black, sleek, military grade but dressed as civilian — moved like a shadow through the storm.
He didn’t look at you. Didn’t speak.
You kept your arms wrapped around yourself in the damp raincoat, your soaked sleeves sticking to your skin.
He brought you to a hotel you didn’t recognize. Modern, expensive, silent. The kind of place that smells like clean money and consequence.
At the front desk, he handed over a card — no hesitation — and said, “One bedroom suite. Highest floor. Immediate check-in.”
No questions asked.
The elevator ride was wordless. The carpet muffled your wet shoes.
He opened the door. The lights came on softly. Beige walls, minimalist decor, glass and brushed steel. Tasteful. Lifeless.
He handed you a folded robe from the closet. “Bathroom’s through there,” he said. “Go shower. I’ll order food.”
You took the robe with slow hands, staring at it for a moment too long.
Then, wordlessly, you turned and walked into the bathroom. The door closed with a quiet click behind you.
Warmth. Dry tile. A mirror.
And, for just a moment — silence.The kind that wraps around you like grief you haven’t cried yet.
The robe was too large. Too soft. Too warm.
You could have wrapped it around yourself three times and still gotten lost in it.
On the small round table near the panoramic window, a meal waited. Caleb hadn’t bothered to order anything you used to love. He remembered, of course — that was never the issue. He simply hadn’t tried. The selection was closer to a field ration than a dinner: high protein, complex carbs, dense fats. Efficient. Precise.
You weren’t hungry. You hadn’t been for a long time.
He’d removed the jacket of his uniform, now down to a crisp white shirt with sleeves rolled up to the elbow. And still, something in the room made it feel wrong to sit without permission. He didn’t even look at you — just gave a practiced gesture toward the chair.
You sat on the very edge of it.
Your gaze lingered on the veins in his forearms, raised and defined — marks of control, of command. Of power. Hands that once cradled you through entire nights, hands that had trembled against your skin as if you were the only thing in the world keeping him human.
Now, all of it felt like a dream.
You broke off a piece of warm bread. Turned toward the rain outside. Watched the world bleed behind the glass.
“Did you see a doctor?” he asked.
Not worry. Not fear. Just curiosity. Clinical, detached. A data point to confirm.
You shrugged slowly. “Yeah. Dr. Zane was the first. Then came the rest.”
“And he didn’t tell me anything?”
“Doctor-patient confidentiality,” you said. “I asked him not to.”
“So I wasn’t worthy of the truth?”
You exhaled — sharp and stung, like you’d been slapped. “Caleb… do I really have to explain this? I was trying to spare you the pain.”
He laughed. Cold. Harsh. Suffocating.
The room, already dim, felt darker suddenly. As though the lights had dimmed in reverence to his bitterness.
“Spare me? Oh, brilliant. You really did a hell of a job. I didn’t suffer at all. You disappeared and I just breathed a sigh of relief, right? Out of sight, out of mind — that’s what you think?”
“It’s not the same.”
He slammed a fist down on the table. Plates jumped. Glass cracked under his hand.
“If you had died in my arms, at least I would’ve known. I would’ve known you didn’t leave because I wasn’t enough. Because I loved you too hard, too deep, too much. I would’ve known you had no choice.”
“You wouldn’t have let me die in peace!” you shot back, voice rising. “You would’ve torn the damn planet apart looking for a cure. You would’ve ripped through every system, Farspace tunnel, shouting that it’s almost over, that we’re so close, just hold on—”
He stared at you. Unblinking. Breathing slow.
The storm inside him didn’t explode. It collapsed, inward — contained by the vice grip of discipline. Of rank.
“If loving you with everything I had — completely, recklessly, overwhelmingly — was a crime…” His voice was low now. Not soft. Deadly. “Then yes. I’m guilty. You pronounced the sentence without a trial, Pip-squeak. And I served it. Five years, no parole.”
He stood, pushing away the untouched plate. The chair didn’t scrape. It moved like a blade being sheathed.
“But let me tell you something.” He turned his gaze on you like ice hardening in place. “Love, when betrayed and ground into dust, doesn’t always fade. Sometimes… it turns into contempt.”
The word hit like a slap across the soul.
You couldn’t speak. Your breath stalled in your throat.
“Eat something,” he said. “And get some rest.”
“And you—?”
“I have too much work to babysit you.”
“I don’t want to stay here!”
He paused by the door. Turned half toward you — not enough to be kind.
“Well, that’s a shame,” he said. “Because I do. Sorry, sweetheart, but tonight? You don’t get a choice. I may be, as you so astutely pointed out, a cold-hearted bastard — but even now, I can’t let you wander the streets in wet clothes, racing to meet your own end.”
With that, he slid back into his uniform jacket in one fluid, dismissive motion and stepped out.
The door closed behind him with mechanical precision. The lock flashed red. Like a warning.
Your only way out now was through the window.
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You didn’t remember falling asleep.
Most likely, you just shut down — the body giving out where the soul had already emptied. There were no tears. No breakdown. Just the vast, aching silence of being done. As if the last thread tethering you to this world had snapped soundlessly in the night.
Caleb had been the only family you ever had. He didn’t want to be your partner anymore — that, at least, made sense. But now he didn’t even want to be your brother. Not your anchor. Not your history.
He had become a stranger. And you had made him that.
You had no one to blame. No one to curse. The damage had your fingerprints all over it — deliberate, cruel, irreversible.
You regretted it. You knew it was a mistake.
But what could you do now?
Five years ago, you walked away — selfishly, completely — leaving him alone with the bleeding wreckage of his own love. And you hadn't spared yourself either. You’d just taken the pain and buried it, hoping time would do what courage couldn’t.
And now, with the same selfish silence, you had come back. Uninvited. Unexplained. Unhealed. You didn’t know what you’d hoped for — redemption, maybe. A flicker of warmth. Or just… recognition.
But instead, you lit the same fuse all over again.
You knew, even before boarding the train, that he’d find you. Even if he wasn’t looking. Even if he didn’t want to.
And still — you came.
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The knock at the door startled you. You shot up, heart hammering in your throat.
Room service? Caleb? No. Caleb wouldn’t knock.
A second later, the door’s lock blinked with coded lights, and a young man in a tailored aide’s uniform stepped in. He was polite enough to knock. But not enough to wait for a response.
Not Liam. Someone much younger.
“Good morning, ma’am,” he said with crisp formality, almost saluting before catching himself.
He tried — really tried — to keep his gaze level, but you could see the questions in his eyes. He didn’t know who you were, why you were important, or why the Admiral had seen fit to personally house you in a suite normally reserved for political dignitaries.
“I was ordered to bring you a change of clothes and arrange breakfast,” he said. “Admiral Caleb instructed me to return in thirty minutes and escort you to the hospital.”
You blinked. “Tell the Admiral that’s unnecessary.”
The aide offered a tight, apologetic smile. It didn’t reach his eyes. “He also told me to inform you that, if you refuse to come voluntarily, I’m authorized to use force.”
The words hit harder than you expected.
You swallowed, fighting the wave of humiliation. Of course he would go this far. You shouldn’t be surprised. And yet, it burned.
“I see,” you said quietly. “Then I’ll just have coffee.”
The aide hesitated. “Ma’am—”
“You’re not going to shove breakfast down my throat, are you?” you snapped, sharper than intended. “Fine. For the sake of compromise — coffee. And a yogurt. That’s it, Lieutenant.”
He nodded with practiced obedience. “Yes, ma’am.”
And then he left, leaving you alone with your rage and your helplessness.
The coffee tasted bitter. The yogurt was sour. Your taste buds had changed — everything had. Food had stopped being pleasure long ago. It was fuel now, nothing more. You absorbed calories. Not flavor.
Another memory — gone.  Another joy stripped from a life grown colorless. Another piece of yourself you hadn’t noticed was missing… until Caleb reminded you it was never coming back.
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Some part of you expected they'd take you to Akso Hospital.
It would’ve made sense. Zayne knew your case better than anyone — your body, your history, the long and winding ruins of your health. But Caleb didn’t trust him anymore. Not enough to put your life in his hands.
Zayne had already failed him once — by keeping your secret.
Instead, they brought you to an unfamiliar place. Private, sterile, quiet. Too many white walls. Too much controlled light.
Caleb was already there, standing in the center of a vast conference room surrounded by doctors in crisp lab coats.
Even without a word, he commanded the space. In uniform, he looked taller than any of them. Broader. More permanent. Even the chief physician seemed to defer to him instinctively, as though gravity itself bent slightly in his direction.
You paused in the doorway, watching the way their attention latched to him — every word, every breath, every small flick of his hand. He wasn’t just giving orders. He was delivering truth.
And it made your blood boil.
With silent, focused fury, you crossed the room. Stopped too close. Closer than decorum allowed. Closer than memory permitted.
He didn’t move. Didn’t flinch.
“You’re doing exactly what I was afraid of,” you hissed, voice low and sharp, aimed straight at his throat. “I’m not a lab rat. I’m not your property. You don’t get to manage me. I have a right to my own choices.”
He looked you over slowly, without shame or apology — from your scuffed shoes to the oversized hoodie and jeans that hung loose on your frame. He’d remembered your size, but even so, they fit like clothes left behind by a body that used to be stronger.
“Fine,” he said simply. “You can leave.”
You blinked. Taken aback. Then pivoted sharply. “And I will.”
“Just know,” he said, his voice still maddeningly calm, “if you stay — I’ll stay too. If you stop running, you’ll have the chance… to live what time you have left not alone. Not in silence.”
You froze.
One breath. Another.
Your shoulders sagged. The sharpness in your spine dulled. And slowly, you turned back to him.
His face hadn’t changed. That same cold mask. Not unkind — just unreadable.
“You’d stay?” you asked, barely audible.
He exhaled, finally. A quiet thing. His fingers brushed the edge of a metallic button on his uniform — a nervous tic, barely there.
“We were family once,” he said softly. “No one should die alone.”
Your lips parted slightly, as if to answer — but no words came.
There was no sentiment in his voice. No drama. No heartbreak. Just a statement of fact.
Death wasn’t something that scared him. It was a language he knew fluently — one he had spoken too many times, in too many places, across too many battlefields. He’d seen it. Worn it. Come back from it.
Even now, he didn’t flinch from yours.
It was just another ending. Another line of code. A final set of coordinates.
No pleading. No shaking. No denial.
And somehow — that was exactly what you needed. Not mercy. Not hope. Just someone to stay.
For once, it didn’t matter what you deserved. It mattered that you weren’t alone in this room. Not anymore.
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The carousel of tests spun you until nightfall.
Scanners, probes, bloodwork, neurological assessments — round after round until your skin felt bruised from inside out. You were growing irritable, frayed at the seams, more from the dread than the procedures themselves.
They weren’t just gathering data. They were preparing to keep you here. Not for a night. Not even for a week. You could feel it — that low hum of administrative inevitability, ready to steal your time in the name of preservation.
You hadn’t even tied the hospital robe back around your chest when the door hissed open again.
“Oh, do come in. Why not take a piece of my liver while you’re at it?” you snapped, not bothering to turn.
“Your liver’s fine,” came the reply.
Of course. Caleb.
You turned too fast — too defensively — forgetting the robe was still gaping open. Not exposing skin, no. That wasn’t the issue.
It was the mark.
A thick, black web, raised and pulsing, spidered across your chest, the origin rooted deep in the center — where the Aethor Core was housed. Where power should have blossomed. Where your strength was supposed to live.
But it didn’t pulse with life. It cracked. You were coming apart, slowly, precisely, down the middle. Left from right. Light from shadow. Every beat of your heart was a fracture.
You covered your chest too late. He had seen.
He approached, unhurried. Unstoppable. The kind of step he used when nothing in the world could change his mind.
He pulled off one glove with a smooth, practiced motion and pressed his palm to the place where the damage burned hottest.
Right over your heart. Where it splintered loudest.
You closed your eyes. Pain hit like a detonator — sharp, white-hot, cellular. Like a memory of impact. A blade. A bomb. A scream that had never been given voice.
“At any moment,” you whispered, answering the question he hadn’t asked.
He nodded. No surprise. He already knew.
He knew what the Evol had become. That your body couldn’t carry what it was never designed to hold. That the Core — meant to empower — was now the source of slow, elegant devastation.
He knew you were made of chaos. Born to fracture. Destined to burn.
You, who had broken him. And so many others in your wake. Your love had never healed. It had only bled slower.
He didn’t flinch.
He pulled away from your chest, reached for the t-shirt folded over the back of the chair, and helped you slip into it. His touch was clinical. Gentle. Resigned.
Not cold. Not warm. Just necessary.
You swallowed against the lump rising in your throat. It didn’t move.
“Come on,” he said, voice suddenly softer. “Let’s go.”
You blinked. “More tests?”
“No. There's a fair. In our old district. Crowds, noise. Bad music. Terrible food.”
You snorted — just once — but held back the gallows humor itching to spill from your lips. Too early for jokes about death-day parades.
“All right,” you murmured. Pulled your hoodie over your head. Slipped on your sneakers.
You bent to tie the laces, but before your fingers reached them, Caleb was already kneeling before you.
Kneeling.
Your breath hitched.
Just like back then. Just like a lifetime ago.
You shifted your weight awkwardly, as if the floor had gone uneven beneath your feet. The moment was too intimate. Too real.
“An Admiral tying shoelaces,” you said with a weak smirk. “Now that’s more paradoxical than the Colonel ever was.”
He looked up at you. Fingers tightening the knot. A ghost of a smile pulled at his mouth — brief, boyish, and so devastatingly familiar it made your chest ache.
“Let’s agree I outrank your dignity today,” he murmured. “Don’t make me invoke protocol Alpha-Pip-Squeak.”
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At some point, it started to feel like time had folded in on itself.
The sounds, the smells, the fireworks, the shrieking laughter of children, the curling smoke from endless food stalls — it all swirled into a surreal kaleidoscope of celebration. A world too alive.
 Too bright.
It felt wrong. Your heart was failing, slowly betraying you, yet the world kept spinning, singing, dancing without hesitation.
At first, it stung. The unfairness of it. The cruelty.
You didn’t want to die. You didn’t want to vanish into memory.
You had dreamt of children — your children — running through crowds with cotton candy bigger than their faces, covered in chocolate and ice cream. You used to see your future so clearly: a wide house with a garden and a swingset, and somewhere up in the attic, a claw machine you’d insisted on installing, turning the whole floor into a chaotic arcade.
Your eyes filled with tears.
You blinked them away, catching Caleb watching you. You smiled.
“Smoke,” you murmured. “Got in my eyes.”
He nodded. Didn’t believe you, but let you have it.
He wasn’t wearing his Admiral’s uniform anymore. Jeans. A T-shirt with a stupid graphic. A jacket. A cap. He looked familiar. Almost close. Almost yours.
You walked slowly, shoulders brushing occasionally, hands near but never touching. Neither of you tried to bridge the gap. It would’ve felt dishonest. And you were grateful for that honesty. Even if it hurt.
You took a few shots at the game booths. Your hands still remembered. When you won an oversized plush flamingo, you handed it to a girl with bright red ribbons in her pigtails. She couldn’t have been more than six.
You asked her name. Rolled it around on your tongue. You could’ve named a daughter that.
Caleb noticed when your steps started to falter. Without a word, he led you toward an empty table at the edge of the crowd.
While he went for food, you let yourself sink back into the chair, exhaustion tugging hard at your spine. Your eyelids fluttered, but you refused to let sleep steal this. This might not be happiness, but it wasn’t pain.
And that was enough.
He came back with a platter full of street food. You wouldn’t taste much of it. But you remembered. You knew. And for now, that was enough, too.
“It’s a clear night,” he said. “Wanna ride the Ferris wheel?”
You nodded. You’d say yes to anything that would delay the return to sterile rooms, to IV drips and ticking clocks.
The cabin swayed gently as it rose. Wind cooled your cheeks, carrying away the stubborn tears that kept threatening to fall. But you wouldn’t cry. You wouldn’t let grief ruin this night.
“Are you still angry?” you asked.
“Yes.”
“Do you still… hate me?”
He didn’t answer right away.
His gaze drifted over the glowing chaos below, where lights bled together into a gold-and-rainbow puddle of motion and life.
“No,” he said at last. “And I never did.”
He turned toward you, reached up, and tucked a loose strand of hair behind your ear.
“I said it in anger. I was too furious to mean it.”
“I deserved it.”
“You deserved my anger,” he agreed. “But not this. Not a slow, painful fade. Not the kind of desperation that makes you choose impossible things.”
“Caleb…” your voice cracked. “Please… don’t say goodbye yet. It’s not time.”
“I’m trying to be honest,” he murmured. His eyes dropped to your hands, folded like a small prayer in your lap. He looked like he wanted to reach for them — but didn’t. “I’ve learned what hiding the truth from the people you love can cost.”
You swallowed. “I’m… still someone you love?”
He nodded, steady. “There’s no one closer.”
“Then promise me—”
“No.” The word was sharp. Too fast. Too raw.
“No,” he repeated. “I won’t even try.”
“But you could be happy again. If you let yourself open up—”
“Could you?” he cut in. “Could you promise that if I go first, you’ll find someone else? That you’ll love another man? Hold his hand, kiss him, like I never existed?”
Your answer was immediate.
“No.”
Too quick. Too honest.
And he knew. You both did.
Whatever tied you together was deeper than flesh, deeper than time. You could peel away the skin, erase the past, burn the memories— but your soul would still reach for his in the dark.
And his would still be holding on. Waiting.
Until the next life.
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He didn’t take you back to the hospital.
By now, he knew what you had understood five years ago. It was pointless. There was no cure.
You lowered yourself carefully onto the bed, curled up on your side. You looked at him — just a silhouette in the dark, and still somehow larger than life.
“Stay with me tonight,” you whispered.
He didn’t hesitate.
He slipped off his jacket, climbed in beside you. Didn’t touch. Just lay there — facing you.
You stared into each other’s eyes for a long time. Until they closed on their own. Until sleep claimed you.
And the nightmare followed.
The same one, always the same — your body splitting apart, bones breaking under pressure, your chest tearing open as the Core rejected you, gave birth to a creature that looked almost like you. But not you.
Black. Cold. Merciless.
Your body left behind, hollow — a deflated skin, a costume discarded.
You screamed. But you didn’t wake.
You thrashed, fighting against the blanket, clawing at your chest, trying to force the monster back inside, back into the dark where it belonged.
Hands. Strong, steady, familiar.
They caught you. Held you. Rocked you.
Lips brushed your temple. Words — soft, foreign — spoken in a language your heart remembered even if your ears couldn’t make them out.
“No… please…”
Caleb held you like a child, pressing your face against his chest.
Tears — hot, fast — fell onto your cheeks. Not yours.
His.
“I’ve got you, sweetheart. You hear me? You’re not alone. I’m right here. I’m not leaving. I swear to God, I’m not letting go. Come back to me. Please, come back…”
“Caleb…”
“I’m here. I’m here, baby.” His arms tightened, anchoring you in place.
“I’m so scared,” you whispered, fragile.
“I know, Pip. I know.”  His voice cracked — raw, guttural. “I’ll take it all. All the pain. I’ll kill every monster in your path. I’ll tear down the night itself. Just say the word, and I’ll burn this world to the ground to bring you peace.”
“I love you…” The words came with sobs now, spilling out, no longer held back.
His lips kissed your forehead. Your temple. Your cheeks.
“And I love you. My girl. My sunshine. My joy. My… Pip-Squeak.”
“I’m sorry I stole this time from us.”
He shook his head, still holding you like you might slip through his fingers.
“I forgave you a long time ago. How could I not forgive you? God, how could I ever stay mad at you? I’ll be here, right here, until your very last breath.”
He kept whispering. Murmuring softness into your hair. As if the five years of agony had never happened.
 As if you’d never left.
And slowly, gently, you drifted back into sleep. Held in his arms. Wrapped in his warmth. In his love.
With one thought cradling your soul: If the universe is kind — let me go like this. Let me go in his arms. Let me go loved.
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All morning, Caleb didn’t let go of you.
Like he was making up for every moment of distance, he kept touching you — a fleeting kiss, a gentle brush of fingers, little gestures wrapped in warmth and care that tore your heart in half.
You didn’t want to let go of him either.
And when you loved each other, it wasn’t just love — it was desperation.
Through trembling limbs, through broken breath and quiet cries, the pain poured out. The guilt. The fear.
It wasn’t sex. It was absolution.
Then he drove again.
Said he wanted to show you something. You didn’t look out the window. You looked at him. Held his hand. Silence said more than words ever could.
You only grew uneasy when the car pulled up in front of a building — far too official to be anything like a park or a gallery.
“Where are we?”
“It’s… a military lab,” he said, with a small, apologetic smile. Then he kissed you again. “Just need to drop in. Work.”
You followed him inside.
A narrow, impersonal room. Cold lighting. The air too clean.
Caleb gestured to a chair. You sat. He knelt next to you. Kissed you again — too gently. Too long. Something about it felt… wrong.
“I’m sorry, Pips,” he whispered. “I just… I can’t do nothing.”
“Caleb? What are you doing—?”
You saw the glint of metal. Just before the needle plunged into your artery.
“CALEB!”
“Even if you hate me for the rest of your life, I have to try. You have to live, baby.”
You wanted to scream, to shove him, to run —  but your limbs turned to jelly.
You slumped into his arms. And everything went dark.
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The lab was silent.
Sterile.
Lifeless.
Two rooms. One pane of glass between them — just wide enough for you not to miss a single second of the show.
You were strapped to a hospital bed. Wires trailing from your arms and chest. Your head throbbed.
Across the glass — Caleb.
“No. No, Caleb, stop! This is insane!”
 Your voice cracked, but your chest—  your chest was… light. The weight, the crushing pain — gone.
You began to thrash. The heart monitor shrieked in alarm.
You pulled at the restraints — raw, bloody skin tearing against metal cuffs.
You didn’t stop. Didn’t care.
Slippery with blood, your wrists finally slipped free — it felt like peeling flesh from bone.
You tore off the tubes. Fell from the bed.
Your legs wouldn’t hold you. So you crawled.
Crawled to the glass.
“CALEB!”
You slammed your fists against it, over and over again.
He lay on the other side — restrained. But the straps couldn’t hold the violent spasms. And the glass couldn’t muffle the sound of his screaming.
“CALEB! YOU PROMISED!”
You forced yourself upright, pounded your fists until your knuckles split open.
“You promised… you said you’d stay… you said you’d be there until my last breath— CALEB— !”
Your voice disintegrated into a scream.
You kept hammering. Like a moth caught in a jar, helplessly throwing itself against the cruel, unyielding glass.
Kept crying.
The door hissed open behind you. A man in a lab coat.
You lunged at him — knocked him flat. Ran.
Another body in the hallway — you shoved them aside.
You found the next door. Slammed your palm to the entry panel.
It opened.
“CALEB—!”
You collapsed onto him, draping your entire body over his, as if your weight alone could stop the process.
Black veins had begun to trace up his neck. The same pattern that once bloomed across your chest.
“How could you…?” Your voice broke into pieces. “You can’t leave me… you promised…”
For a moment, his eyes found yours. His hand twitched. Reached.
You seized it. Gripped tight.
Tried to unbuckle the straps.They didn’t give.
Hands grabbed you from behind. Dragged you.
You fought like a wild thing. Thrashed. Kicked. One of them fell — you crawled back to him.
Then two more came. You were screaming. Your throat raw.
“No! Don’t take him! DON’T TAKE HIM FROM ME!”
And just before you could lunge forward again—
Another needle.
Your body gave out. Everything dimmed. Collapsed.
But even in that final, spiraling moment—
You whispered one last time: “Caleb…  please… don’t leave me…”
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
Your heart hadn’t beaten this steady in years.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
It would’ve been better if it had stopped.
You didn’t open your eyes. You didn’t ask where you were. You knew.
You were in a world where he was gone.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
You used to live with physical pain — you knew how to endure it. You knew how to die with it. You’d pictured your grave more than once — just beside the one marked “Josephine.”
The one where, for a time, they’d already carved “Caleb.”  Now they’d just correct the second date. As if it had all been a clerical error.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
“Shut up,” you muttered, ripping the sensor from your finger.
Beeeeeeeeeeeeep.
The monitor whined in protest.
You clamped your hands over your ears, buried your head under the pillow.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
Beeeeeeeeeeeeep.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
“What the hell?!”
Another monitor?
You pulled the pillow away. Opened your eyes.
On the second cot, just a few feet away— Caleb.
Alive. Awake.
His monitor was singing the same rhythm. And on his lips — the hint of a smile.
“You bastard!”
You flung the pillow at him. He caught it.
“Did you mourn me?”
“That’s still pending! You—YOU!!! You took my Aethor Core?!”
You looked around for something else to throw. He raised his hands in surrender.
“Easy, Pip-Squeak. I didn’t take anything. Your precious Core is right where it belongs — in that merciless, vengeful little heart of yours.”
“I’m merciless? You made me believe you were—!”
You stopped.
Because you knew. God, you knew you would’ve done the same.
You slid off the cot carefully, clutching the IV stand for balance. Crossed the short distance to his bedside, testing each step. Sat down on the edge. 
You reached for his hand. Fingers trembling, unsure. But the moment you touched him — he was warm.
Not fading. Not cold. Not gone.
Warm, alive, present.
And it shattered something inside you.
“You weren’t dying because of the Core itself,” he said gently. “It was the energy feedback loop. The Core stopped syncing with your biopattern. Basically, your system crashed, and the power cell started pulling directly from your heart to survive. Which, you know, kinda fatal.”
“So what… you swapped our batteries?”
“In layman’s terms — yes.”
“And that doesn’t kill you?”
“My protocore’s a lazy old tank,” he grinned. “It got a nice boost from yours. Just enough to last me, I think.”
“You swear that’s the truth?” you arched a skeptical brow.
“I do.” He reached up, hesitantly, brushing your cheek.
You didn’t pull away.
“I told you I’d take your pain.”
“And you also promised you’d stay with me till my last breath,” you whispered, lips nearly brushing his.
“And I intend to keep that promise,” he said, pulling you close and kissing you. “And if you try to run again, just so you know — I’ve got a year’s supply of those sedative syringes.”
You let out a small laugh, nudged him gently, then climbed onto his cot, curling into his side, head on his shoulder.
“I’ll keep that in mind in case you pull another stunt like that. Admiral.”
His arm slipped around your waist. His grin widened — softer, familiar. Like the old days. Like he was just your Caleb again.
“Well,” he said, “those are consequences I’m willing to accept.”
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
His heart beat stronger.  And yours — yours found his rhythm. Matched it.
Perfectly. Just like always.
Because the truth was simple.
You couldn’t exist in a world where one of you was missing.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Another red flag: didnt come home within 10 pulls. How dare they. It doesn't matter if I only have 1 wish and no pity, they should've came home before I even pull. I spent all my wishes on X02 and Lumiere myth and I only have 15 wish, 2 pity, and a dream... spoilers, I didn't get any of them
The biggest red flag for all love interests in Love and Deepspace is their audacity to stay fictional. If they really loved me, they would've pop out of the screen and cuddle with me.
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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The devs patting themselves on the back
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Infold to infold
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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This bathroom is bigger than my entire apartment lmaooo
you telling me THIS is the bathroom sylus called “small?”
you telling me THIS is the bathroom those shower sex fics were about???
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i was imagining it would be at least 1/4th the size of the room but DAMN
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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Zayne trying to be the voice of reason 😭
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bunbun-mochi ¡ 2 months ago
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MC, unbuttoning shirt: It's so hot here.
Zayne: I know. But why are you unbuttoning my shirt?
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