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This is so good, reminded how I love reading fics 𼚠also this makes me want to experience the love I had ones experienced before
CALLING YOU HOME â SATORU GOJO


pairing â pilot!satoru gojo x air traffic controller!reader
summary â captain satoru gojo is the most infuriating pilot you've ever had the displeasure of guiding through tokyo's airspace. for months, he's turned every radio call into an opportunity to flirt, compliment your voice, and generally make your work life insufferable. you've never seen his face, but you're convinced he's exactly the kind of arrogant pilot you never want to deal with outside work. if only your heart would stop racing when you hear his voice.
word count â 16.5 k
genre/tags â aviation AU, pilot x air traffic controller, annoyance to lovers, mutual pining, slow burn, workplace romance, voice kink if you squint, long distance relationship (kinda), he falls first and falls so HARD, i love him in this ugh, yearning endboss, dramatic love confessions bc we need
warnings â 18+ ONLY. contains explicit sexual content, mentions of grief/loss (death of family member), strong language, aviation emergencies, and satoru gojo being criminally sweet over radio frequencies.
author's note â friendssss i really hope u like this one bc i am obsessed lol. grab your headphones, play your favorite music and prepare for takeoff <3
masterlist + support my writing + ao3 + artwork by @3-aem
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting permission to land.â
You didnât even need to check the screen. Youâd recognize his voice anywhere, even in your nightmaresâwarm, cocky, and already grinding on your nerves like nails on chalkboard.
âMiss me, honey?â
Your pen snapped in half. Around the control tower, heads turned in your direction. Maki, your longest colleague and friend, pressed her lips together, shoulders shaking with suppressed laughter. Even Ijichi raised an eyebrow from his station. You hated them all a little for how they all enjoyed the situation so much.
You closed your eyes, counted to three, and then hit the transmission button. âFlight 447, you do realize youâre on a public frequency, right? Everyone can hear you.â
âAs long as youâre listening, Control, thatâs all that matters.â
âLucky me,â you muttered, pulling up his flight information on the screen. Scattered clouds drifted past the towerâs angled windows, casting fleeting shadows over your cluttered workstation. âAlso, youâre late, Captain.â
âBy two minutes. Come on, thatâs hardly anything.â
âMore than enough time to get on my nerves.â
âI love it when you talk to me like that.â
Behind you, someone coughedâprobably trying to hide a laugh.
âAnd I love it when you stop talking,â you shot back.
His laugh came through the radio, warm and amused. âSomeoneâs feisty today. Is the coffee in the tower that bad again?â
âCoffeeâs fine. Itâs the pilot thatâs giving me a headache.â
âMmm. I like it when your voice gets all defensive, beautiful.â
There it was again. Beautiful.
Always beautiful. Never âmaâamâ or âtowerâ or even your call sign like every other normal fucking pilot with a shred of professionalism would do. With Gojo, it was always pretty, or beautiful, orâGod help youâhoney. Like he was talking to a date he wanted to charm, not calling for airspace clearance on public frequency.
Youâd corrected him once early on. âUse proper radio protocol,â youâd said, but all he replied was, âSorry, Control. Slipped. Wonât happen again, pretty.âÂ
It had happened again. And again. And again.
You leaned back in your chair, staring up at the ceiling and entertaining the fantasy of reaching through the frequency and strangle him with your headset cord. Instead, your fingers found the stress ball on your desk and squeezed until your knuckles went white.
âYou donât even know what I look like,â you said, frustrated.
âYour voice tells me everything I need to know. And Iâm betting youâre even more beautiful than you sound.â
âIs that why you like hearing yourself talk so much? Because your voice tells you how pretty you are?â
He laughed. âOuch. Youâre brutal today, Control. Permission to land before you completely break my poor heart?â
âFlight 447, youâre cleared to land, runway 24L. Wind 240 at 8 knots. Try not to crash while youâre busy thinking about how charming you are.â
âCopy that, beautiful. And for the record? I wasnât thinking about myself.â His voice dropped lower, not caring at all that he was on public frequency. âI was thinking about you.â
Heat crept up your neck. Around the tower, a few heads turned your way once moreâgrinning, and you wanted to punch them in the face.Â
You were silent for a few seconds and you could basically hear his grin forming on the other end of the line.
âLooks like Iâve got you blushing. Well then, see you on the ground, Control.â
More heat crept up your neck. You yanked off your headset and slammed it down on the desk, resisting the urge to scream into a stack of paperwork. Goddamn it, he made you want to quit your job. Or strangle him. Or both.
You looked out the towerâs window just in time to watch his plane break through the clouds and touch down. A fucking textbook perfect landing. Of course it was. Captain Satoru Gojo was, without question, the most infuriating pilot youâd ever had the displeasure of guiding in. And unfortunately, he was also the best.
It had started a few months ago when he began regularly flying the international routes from Japan to Central Europeâthe very same routes youâd specifically requested when you transferred to Haneda.Â
The 2 AM flights? The twelve hour shifts from hell? The ones that made most controllers question all their life choices and develop an unhealthy, codependent relationship with the espresso machine?Â
You loved them.
These were the long flights where pilots were usually dead tired and just wanted to get home. Communication was professional and efficient. No small talk, no unnecessary chatter, just vectors, altitudes, and a few polite acknowledgments. You could guide a Boeing 777 from Tokyo to Frankfurt with maybe twenty lines of dialogue, max. That was the dream.
These pilots had been airborne for twelve hours or longerâthe last thing they wanted was a chatty air traffic controller stretching out their shift with unnecessary conversation. And the last thing you wanted was to listen to their rambling. You loved those quiet and professional pilotsâthe ones you barely had to talk to, just guide them in and call it a day. Great. Easy work. You loved your job when it was uncomplicated.
While your colleagues dealt with the chaos of domestic flightsâtight turnarounds, grumbling pilots, weather complaints, gate drama and all that shitâyou got the stern and serious long-distance flyers.
Until Captain Satoru Gojo.
The first time you handled Flight 447âs approach out of Prague, you braced for the usual. Someone whoâd been flying for thirteen hours straight and just wanted to land, deplane, and find the nearest bed. What you got instead was a happy voice that sounded like the man had just woken from the greatest nap of his lifetime and could easily fly for another thirteen hours.
âTokyo Control, Flight 447 requesting descent. And might I say... what a beautiful night it is up here.â
You blinked at your radar screen. It was 2:03 AM. Cloudy skies. Visibility barely above minimum levels. Nothing about it was beautiful.
Most pilots at this hour could barely remember their own call signs. But not Gojo. Gojo sounded wide awake and relaxedâand, unfortunately, talkative.Â
God, he talked so much. Always cracking jokes, always so cocky, always dragging out what shouldâve been a thirty second exchange into a five minute monologue over the radio.
âFlight 447, descend and maintain flight level 240.â
âDescending to 240. Had to adjust our approach three times tonight because of wind shear. Amazing how much the atmosphere changes in just a few thousand feet. Did you know thatââ
âFlight 447, contact Tokyo Aproach on 119.7.â
He sighed. âCopy that, beautiful. Always a pleasure chatting with you.â
It started professional enoughâwell, as professional as someone could be while constantly calling air traffic control âbeautifulââbut overtime, he got more and more flirty. Somewhere around the fifth or seventh flight, you guided him in, he stopped sounding like a pilot and started sounding like a man leaving voicemail notes to his girlfriend.Â
âGood morning, gorgeous.â
âDid you miss my voice, honey?â
âUntil next time, beautiful.â
Maybe it was his personality, as if he simply couldnât help himselfâlike heâd physically explode if he didnât borderline sexual harass his ground crew and was naturally incapable of having a normal conversation. But goddamn, did it annoy you.
Heâd never even seen you. Didnât know your name, wouldnât recognize your face if you passed him in the terminal. He probably couldnât even point to the tower from his cockpit window. And yet, every transmission felt like he thought he was on private frequency with you, and not broadcasting on public monitored by half the airspace.
And oh my God, the ramblingâthe fucking rambling. And, of course, you were his favorite audience.
âYou know, Control, I was reading this article about albatrosses during my layover in Warsaw and it got me thinking. Did you know they can fly for years without ever touching ground, like literally sleeping while they fly? Can you imagine? They use these tiny wind gradients over the waves to do that. Makes our fuel consumption look pretty inefficient, doesnât it?â
You already felt your soul leaving your body.
âAlthough I bet you could optimize their route better than they can to save even more energy. Youâve got such a lovely voice for giving directions. Very authoritative. I like thatââ
Sometimes heâd yap for minutes until you got so annoyed that youâd rip off your headset before he could finish whatever outrageous story he was about to finish and waved at Ijichi to take over. Poor Ijichiâan actual saint and unfortunately still a rookie, so he was your victimâwould sigh, slid on his headset and took over the frequency to reply to Gojoâs rambling about birds in a very distinctly male, distinctly unimpressed voice.
âFlight 447, this is Tokyo Control. Please state your current altitude.â
A pause. âOh. Um. Flight level 380. SorryâIs the other controller⌠did sheâŚ?â
âFlight 447, maintain current altitude and heading. Contact Approach on 119.7.â
Out of the corner of your eye, you saw Ijichi shoot you a pained look and mouthed, âYour boyfriendâs looking for youâ while you pretended to be very busy with paperwork, highlighting the same line of a weather report youâd already read four times.
Youâd complained to your supervisor, of course. Marched into Yagaâs office with a list of incidents and timestamps of what you considered to be highly unprofessional behaviour that was interfering with air traffic operations.
Yaga had listened, occasionally nodding, while you explained in detail why Captain Gojoâs voice should be banned from all airspace. When you finished, heâd leaned back in his chair and given you that lookâthe one supervisors gave when they were about to tell you something you didnât want to hear.
âHas he ever caused a delay?â Yaga asked.
âWell, no, butââ
âMissed a radio call?â
âNo, howeverââ
âFailed to follow vectors or altitude assignments?â
âThatâs not the pointââ
âHas he ever said anything explicitly inappropriate? Sexual harassment, offensive language, anything that would violate communications protocols?â
Youâd opened your mouth, then closed it. You were fighting a losing battle.
Yaga had shrugged and pointed out that Gojo never said anything explicitly inappropriate, never caused delays, and had the cleanest safety record of any pilot flying commercial routes in Japan. Zero incidents, zero violations, zero passenger complaints. He was the perfect pilot.
âThe guyâs annoying but harmless,â Yaga had said at last, and slid your complaint folder back across his desk.
Harmless. Right.
Harmless if you didnât count the fact that he was actively driving you insane and making you seriously consider changing careers. Or at least requesting a transfer to cargo flights, where the pilots were too busy dealing with departures every thirty minutes to spend time talking about stupid bird flyting techniques.
But damn itâyou worked so hard for this position. You were a certified, professional air traffic controller with five years on the radar and an impeccable safety record. Youâd studied for two years to pass the brutal exams, survived months in training simulations and clawed your way up from ground control to tower to approach and finally to the international routes.Â
You directed aircraft worth billions of dollars, carrying hundreds of lives, through some of the most complex and congested airspace in Asia. You coordinated with air traffic controllers in twelve different countries, handled language barriers, time zones, techchnical delays, and medical emergenciesâall while being always fucking calm and polite.Â
Okay, scratch the polite part. But you got the job done, and thatâs what mattered. And you were not about to throw it all away because one stupid, obnoxious pilot with an equally stupid, attractive voice was too dense to tell the difference between air traffic control and fucking Tinder.
Okay, forget about the calm part, too.
It didnât help that your colleagues found the whole thing all too amusing. Your colleague Makiâwho handled mostly domestic routes and therefore dealt with normal, professional pilotsâhad already labelled Gojo your âwork husbandâ.
And every time his flight number popped up on the radar, sheâd make kissy faces in your direction and sing, âOh, your boyfriendâs calling,â to which youâd reply âHeâs not my boyfriend.â Or worse, sheâd lean over your shoulder while he was in the middle of yet another monologue, whispering when youâd finally ask him out. Of course, she knew heâd hear every word on the other end of the radio, prompting him to tease you with, âSheâs right. When will you finally ask me?â
âFlight 447, turn left heading 090, descend to flight level 200.â
âLeft 090, down to 200. And might I add that you sound particularly lovely today, Control? Did you do something different with your⌠well, I canât see your hair, but I bet it looks very pretty.â
Maki would choke on her laughter like a middle schooler watching her crush talk, and youâd have to clench your fists to stop yourself from punching them both.
And it didnât help that everyone loved him, of course.Â
Everyone except you, apparently.
The ground crew basically fought over who got to service his aircraft. Youâd see a swarm of orange vests crowding Gate 7 whenever Flight 447 rolled inâlike teenage fangirls waiting backstage for their favourite boy band. It was ridiculous.
Youâve seen how the gate agents would always check their hair and straighten their ties. Hana from passenger services bought new lipstick âjust in caseâ she ran into Captain Gojo during a layover.Â
Even the janitorsâthe fucking janitorsâsomehow developed a sudden obsession with the floor around Gate 7. Mr. Takeshi, whoâd been mopping this place since the airport was built, now took his sweet time in that exact area. Like. What the fuck.
It was like the entire airport had developed a collective crush on a man most of them had never even spoken to. All based on stories and the occasional glimpse of him walking through the terminal in his pilot uniform.
Youâd never actually seen him. In the months heâd been flying your routes, your shifts always ended right before he arrivedâor you were stuck up in the tower when he was on the ground. Like you existed in parallel universes. You guided his plane through the airspace, but never actually crossed paths on the ground.
Everyone said he was stupidly prettyâso damn dreamy and everything. You couldâve looked him up, googled him, stalked the airport intranet. But you didnât. For all you knew, he was sixty with a beer belly and balding. But unfortunately, he also had an infuriatingly attractive voice over radio communication.
Which only made it worse.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
It was one of those days where everything had gone wrong the moment youâd stepped into the tower. The coffee machine was broken, spitting out something between coffee grounds and mud. Your computer crashed twice during the morning shift, erasing twenty minutes of logged flight data. And to top it off, Ijichi had called in sick, leaving you to handle both international and domestic flights with only Maki as backupâwho was currently tied up managing a medical diversion across three different frequencies.
So when Flight 447âs call sign appeared on your radar screen a full twenty minutes ahead of schedule, you felt your eye twitch.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting vectors for approach.â
You glared at the radar. Of course he was early. And of fucking course he was screwing up your carefully timed arrival window. Youâd scheduled him between two other flights, and now you had to rearrange everything yet again.
âFlight 447, turn left heading 180, descend and maintain 3,000 feet.â
âLeft 180, down to 3,000. You sound tense, Control. Long shift?â
Deep breath. Remember, violence is not an option.
âJust doing my job, 447.â
âOuch. Thatâs definitely tension. Let me guessâcomputer crash? Did someone steal your lunch? Ah wait, I knowâthe coffee machine spat out mud again, didnât it?â
You blinked at your screen. How could he possiblyâ
âFlight 447, maintain current heading and altitude.â
âCome on, donât be like that. I brought you something from Zurich. Might help improve your mood.â
You paused, finger hovering over the radio button. âYou⌠brought me something?â
âMhm. You know those famous Swiss chocolatiers? Heard they make the best chocolate in Europe, so I picked some up for you.â
You stared at your screen for a beat, unsure whether to feel weirdly flattered or wildly uncomfortable. Probably both.
âYou donât even know who I am.â
âI know enough,â he said, still annoyingly casual. âI know you prefer late international routes because theyâre usually quiet and professional. I know you drink your coffee black, because Iâve heard you complainâmore than onceâthat no one washes out the cream dispenser in the break room, and that it will one day cause a biohazard. Which, judging by your mood today, Iâm guessing no oneâs done that in a while, so now the good machineâs off to maintenance again, and youâre stuck with that old one that just spits out grounds.â
A pause.
âAnd I know you stay late to help train the newbies, because Iâve heard your voice in the background on calls. I have to say, youâve got this calm, patient tone that makes it almost sound like youâre not seconds away from strangling them. Itâs kind of adorable, really.â
You sat up straighter. How did he know all that? And more importantly, why had he noticed all that?
You didnât respond right away, unsure what to respond at all. Then, finally, you clicked your radio.
âFlight 447, turn right heading 240. Contact Approach on 119.7.â
âWait, thatâs it? No âthank youâ or âwow, youâre so thoughtful for bringing me treats form overseasâ? I declared that stuff at customs, you know. It was a whole ordeal.â
Despite your awful morning, your lip twitched. âYou declared chocolate at customs?â
âHad to. They were weirdly suspicious about a pilot carrying so much chocolate in his carry-on. I told them it was for someone special, and they got all sentimental and waved me through.â
âYou told customs agents I was special?â
âI told them the truth. âŚThough I may have implied you were my girlfriend to avoid further questioning.â
âYou what?â
His laugh crackled through the headset, way too pleased with himself. âRelax, beautiful. Customs agents donât exactly hang out with air traffic controllers. Your secret identity is safe.â
âFlight 447, Iâm transferring you to Approach. Stop inventing fake relationships with me at international borders.â
âSo weâre not dating? Huh. Thatâs news to me.â
âIâm doing my job.â
âYeah. And your job involves listening to me, technically speaking.â
âMy job involves keeping you from colliding with other planes, not entertaining your delusions.â
âSee? You care about my safety. Such a good girlfriend, Control.â
You could almost hear the smirk through the static. Across the tower, Makiâfinally free from her emergencyâwas trying desperately to look anywhere but your direction. She was listening too, you realized, her face reddening as she barely held in her laughter.
âFlight 447 switch to Approach now, or I will reroute you to Osaka instead.â
âYou wouldnât dare. Youâd miss me too much.â
âTry me.â
âOkay, okay, Iâm switching,â he said, still laughing. âIâll make sure the chocolate gets delivered to your gate. Itâs got your name on it. Well⌠your call sign, anyway. Couldnât exactly ask for your real name without sounding like a creep. Oh, and thereâs a little something extra in the box, too.â
Your finger froze over the transmit button. âWhat kind of extra?â
âJust a little something. See you on the ground, beautiful.â
The line went silent as he switched to Approach, leaving you staring at your screen with a whole lot of annoyance, curiosity, and something dangerously close to anticipation swirling in your head.
Maki rolled her chair over without missing a beat. âDid he just say he brought you chocolate? From Switzerland?â
âApparently.â
âAnd declared you his girlfriend to customs?â
âI hate him.â
âAnd thereâs something extra waiting for you at the gate?â
You gave her a warning look. âStop that.â
âYou realize most guys donât even text back. And he flew across eleven time zones and smuggled in fancy chocolate for you. Yeah, no one does that unless theyâre into you.â
âItâs creepy.â
âSure,â she said. âSo creepy that youâre smiling about it.â
âIâm not smiling.â
âYou absolutely are.â She leaned closer. âAnd youâre totally going to check the gate during your break.â
You turned back to your screen. âI have work to do.â
âRight. Want me to cover for you while you go see what the handsome pilot brought you?â
âIâm notââÂ
Your radar lit up. âTower, this is Flight 892 requesting vectors for approach.â Saved by traffic, or whatever. You put your headset back on, thankful for the distraction, and focused on the radar.Â
You were definitely not thinking about Swiss chocolate.
Or whatever extra he brought.
Not even a little.
Okay, maybe a little.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
You waited until Flight 447 was safely out of range and someone elseâs problem before making your move. The tower had quieted into its usual evening rhythmâslower, calmer, manageable. Most of the midday traffic was gone. And you? You were definitely just walking to the gate to, you know, get your steps in. Obviously.
âOff to investigate your love offerings?â Maki called as you headed for the elevator.
âGate operations check,â you tried, but you couldnât fool her.
The box was sitting right there at the international gate deskâimpossible to miss. It was white and elegant, wrapped with a dark green ribbon, and with your controller call sign handwritten on the tag. Hana, the gate agent on duty, lit up the moment she saw you.
âOh! Youâre Control Seven! Captain Gojo dropped that off a few hours ago. He was very specific that it had to go to âthe controller with the most beautiful voice in aviation.ââ She giggled like a schoolgirl. âHeâs so romantic.â
You stared at the box. It was bigger than youâd expected with a fancy logo that suggested the box probably cost more than your monthly food budget.
âDid he⌠say anything else?â
âJust that youâd had a rough day and deserved something sweet.â Hana sighed. âHeâs so thoughtful. And his eyes? Like a winter sky.â
Winter sky? My god. You swore everyone around here was losing their goddamn minds over this man. You were so fed up with the collective swooning, you were starting to wonder if you were the only one left immune to his bullshit.
âRight. Well. Thanks.â
Back at your console, you set it down and stared at it as if it were a ticking bomb. Maki appeared at your side, peering over your shoulder.
âHoly shit. Is that from that famous Swiss brand? Do you even know how expensive that place is?â
âItâs just chocolate.â
âJust chocolate?â Maki carefully lifted the lid. Inside, each handmade confection was perfectly nestled in its own spot. âThese are, like, forty bucks each. Thereâs at least thirty pieces in here.â
Ijichi gave a low whistle. âYour pilot boyfriend just dropped twelve hundred dollars on chocolate for you.â
âHeâs not my boyfriend.â But your eyes were still glued to the box, your brain struggling to process the fact that someone had just casually spent more than your rent on Swiss truffles. Someone whoâd never even seen your face.
âOh my God, try one,â Maki said, already plucking out a champagne truffle. âDonât be shy.â
You picked a dark chocolate filled with salted caramel and bit into it. It was... really good. Incredible, even. Probably the best thing youâd ever tasted. Which, somehow, only made this entire situation worse.
âGirl, you are so lucky,â Maki sighed, popping another piece into her mouth. âA hot pilot who brings you fancy chocolate? Where do I sign up for that kind of harassment?â
âHeâs probably not even attractive. Iâve never actually seen him.â
Both Maki and Ijichi froze, their mouths full of chocolate.
âWait,â Maki said slowly. âYouâve never seen him?â
âOur shifts donât overlap. Iâm always in the tower when his flights come in.â
âOh my God.â Maki turned to her computer. âIâm looking him up. The airport has photos of all the regular pilots for security, right?â
âTower, this is Flight 234 requesting vectors for approach,â crackled your headset.Â
You grabbed your radio. âFlight 234, turn right heading 090, descend and maintain 4,000 feet.â
You moved quickly back to your station, eyes fixed on the radar screen. Behind you, you could feel Maki and Ijichi staring at you, clearly waiting for you to come back to them to gossip, but you waved them off without turning around.Â
As you guided the aircraft in, your hand absently toyed with the ribbon around the box, and thatâs when you noticed the âsomething extraâ. Tucked beneath the chocolates was a postcard that showed the Swiss alps. You turned the card around.
âFor the voice that always guides me home. Thank you for keeping me safe up there.â â S
You shivered.
Out of annoyance. Obviously. Not because of the note. Or the postcard. Or the very stupid, very warm feeling creeping up your neck. Nope. Pure irritation. And maybe a tiny bit of cardiac distress. From rage. Clearly.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
Youâd barely slept the night before. Every time you closed your eyes, youâd thought about stupidly expensive Swiss chocolate, that annoyingly sincere note, and the way his voice had softened when heâd called you special. It was infuriating. You were a professional, rational adult, not someone who lost sleep over a cocky pilot with a bedroom voice that was clearly a walking red flag.
Yet here you were at 12:28 PM, exhausted and surviving on your fourth cup of awful Tower coffee because an emergency landing had turned your normal shift into a fourteen hour marathon. A passenger going into labour during a flight from Beijing had caused half the Pacific to be rerouted, and by the time the situation had been handled, the night shift was understaffed and youâd agreedâmore or less voluntarilyâto stay and help out.
The tower had gone still in the way airports only do at night. Just you and your collegue Kai on shift, and him busy on a separate channel, handling a delayed cargo inbound. Somewhere below, the terminal lights flickered as the cleaning crews did laps. You rested your chin in your palm and tried not to hate everything.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting approach clearance.â
It took your brain a second to catch up. Flight 447. Heâd just arrived from Paris. Of course. You took a breath.
âFlight 447, unable to clear for approach at this time. We have outbound traffic. Maintain current altitude and turn left heading 270 for holding.â
âCopy that. Left 270. Long night down there?â
You rubbed your eyes. âMedical emergency earlier. Youâll be in the hold for about an hour.â
âRoger. Heyâdid you get the chocolates?"
Despite your exhaustion, you felt heat creep up your neck. Damn him. âYes. Thank you. They were... unnecessary.â
âBut good?â
You exhaled. âReally good.â
âKnew it. You sound tired, Control. How long you been on?â
You checked your watch. âFourteen hours.â
âYou shouldnât be pulling shifts that long. You always look after everyone else but youâve got to take care of yourself too, you know.â
You paused, the words hitting you sideways. Maybe it was the fatigue making you soft, or maybe it was the fact that, for once, he didnât sound like he was trying to get a rise out of you. He sounded genuinely concernedâand it threw you off more than any flirtation ever had. You didnât even have the energy to fight him on it.
âSomeone had to cover.â
âNot at the cost of your own health. You drinking water? Eating real food? And I donât mean the sandwiches they sell in the vending machines in the gates.â
âI did eat something a few hours ago. Iâm okay. We had a pregnant passenger go into labor. Coordinated three hospitals and rerouted six aircraft, then landed them priority.â
âIs she okay?â
âBaby girl, born healthy. I heard from the flight attendant that theyâve named her Sky. Itâs kinda cheesy.â
âThatâs beautiful.â His voice was soft. âYou helped bring a little life into the world tonight.â
âItâs just part of the job.â
âItâs not just your job, you know that,â he said gently. âItâs you being the person people count on when it really matters.â
âI donât knowâŚâ
âYou know why I always ask for this route?â
âBecause you like to annoy me?â
He laughed quietly. âBecause your voice is the best part of my day. Doesnât matter what went wrong, how difficult the passengers, or how many delays we had to deal withâthe moment I hear you on frequency⌠I know Iâm okay. I know Iâm home.â
You blinked. Words tangled somewhere between your chest and your mouth, but none made it out. How could they? Not with your heart thudding like it was trying to escape. Not with your lungs suddenly feeling too small.Â
It was silent in the tower. Kai was still busy on the other frequency with his cargo flight, leaving you alone with nothing but Gojoâs soft breathing in your headset and the pounding of your pulse.Â
You pressed your forehead to your arms on the desk, willing your heart rate to slow. Eventually, quietly, you said, âWhy? Why are you being so⌠like this? You donât even know me.â
âI know enough. I know you work too hard and care too much. I know youâre calm even when the towerâs on fire. I know you have the most beautiful voice Iâve ever heard, and you use it to keep people safe.â
You could barely breathe.
âYou deserve more than what this job takes from you, you know,â he added, almost like an afterthought.
âYouâre so stupid,â you whispered, the insult so soft it barely had teeth.
âYouâre exhausted. Lie to me tomorrow.â A pause. âYou know, the cherry blossoms along the Seine were beautiful in Paris.â His voice grew wistful, and you closed your eyes, letting the sound wash over you in the quiet tower. âIâd love to show you someday.â
âYour girlfriend probably wouldnât appreciate you taking other women on romantic trips to Paris.â
âI donât have a girlfriend,â he said without hesitation. âI wish you were my girlfriend.â
You took another deep breath, slower this time, but it didnât help. Your face felt hot, your pulse wouldnât settle, and worst of all, you couldnât even pretend it wasnât happening. What the fuck were you supposed to do with that information?Â
Normally you would have hung up by now, would have found some cutting remark to shut down whatever this was becoming. But maybe it was the exhaustion seeping into your bones, or the way his voice had gone so unsual gentle, that made you let it happenâthis slow unraveling of the careful distance youâd built between yourself and the voice that had somehow become more important to you than you wanted to admit
âYouâre insane.â
âYouâre beautiful.â
You pressed your forehead deeper into the crook of your arm, as if you could bury the whole situation under your sleeves. As if he couldnât still hear every shaky breath of yours over the radio.
âWhat? No comeback?â he teased. âYou really must be tired.â
âI hate how you say stuff like that,â you mumbled into your sleeve, âwhen you know Iâm too tired to fight back.â
âSounds like good timing, then.â
âYouâre the worst.â
âMhm. I like when you sound all sleepy,â he said, lower now, almost like he was smiling. âItâs really cute.â
âShouldnât you be asking if I have a boyfriend or something?â
âSounds like you want me to ask you.â
âI donât.â You exhaled slowly, turning your head so your cheek pressed against your arm. âIâm not looking for anything.â
âGood,â he said. âSo no boyfriend. Because it would be really awkward for me to take you to Paris if you had one. Boyfriends tend to get weird about that sort of thing.â
A soft laugh escaped before you could stop it. âYou donât even know me. Why are you so persistent?â
It was silent for a whileâso long it made your skin itch. You glanced at the console. Still active. But then his voice returned.
âBecause for months, your voice has been the only thing thatâs felt like home,â he said. âEvery flight, every approach, every time you say my call sign... it feels like coming home. And maybe thatâs stupid. Maybe Iâm just a pilot whoâs spent too many nights alone in hotels, wondering what itâd be like to hear you say my nameâmy real nameâjust once, but IâŚâ
The tower felt impossibly still around you, save for the sound of his soft breathing in your ear and the heavy press of something strange in your chest.
âFlight 447ââ
âCan I ask you something? And you can say no.â
ââŚWhat?â
âDo you want to switch to a private frequency?â
You shouldnât. It was a clear breach of communication policy. You knew that. But the tower was empty, Kai was distracted, and there was something in the way he said it that made you want to say yes so terribly much.
âFrequency 121.9,â you said.
âCopy that. Switching now.â
Your heart thudded. You flipped over to the private channel, palms slightly clammy against the controls, and waited.
âTower, this is Flight 447 on private frequency.â
âIâm here.â
You could hear the smile in his voice when he answered. âTell me something about you.â
âWhat do you want to know?â
âAnything. Doesnât matter. I just want to listen to your voice.â
You went quiet for a beat, still resting your head on your arms, the headset cord wrapped loosely around your fingers. Your body was heavy with exhaustion, but something warm had started to bloom low in your chest.
âThatâs⌠I donât know what to say.â
âStart simple. What did you have for breakfast?â
Despite everything, you almost smiled. âCoffee.â
âJust coffee?â He groaned. âThatâs terrible for you. You need read food.â
âSays the man who probably only eats airplane food and orders hotel room service.â
âI make great scrambled eggs, actually,â he said, a little smug. âSecret ingredient is a little cream cheese folded in at the end.â
âYou cook?â
âMhmm. And I make the best carbonara.â
âAccording to who?â
âAccording to me. And Iâm a very reliable source.â
You smiled again. âVery humble, too.â
âAbsolutely. So, what about you? What do you do when youâre not busy keeping pilots from crashing into each other?â
You surprised yourself by answering. You told him about the pottery class you barely had time for on weekends, how you were trying to teach yourself guitar but could only play three chords and a more or less decent version of âWonderwallâ. You admitted to watch trash reality TV while folding laundry, and how your poor balcony basil plant had died three times and counting despite your best efforts.Â
It just... flowed. And it felt good. Comforting, even.Â
You found yourself sharing more than you meant to, your voice softer than usual in the quiet of the tower, like the distance between you made it easier to be honest.Â
You hadnât realized until now how much youâd come to like hearing his voice. Not the cocky, smug tone he usually used on open frequencyâbut this version. Soff and warm in a way that felt almost intimate. Like he actually cared about your answer. Like he actually saw you, even from thirty thousand feet away.
You were quiet for a moment, then asked, âWhy did you become a pilot?â
A breath passed. Maybe two.
âI had a little sister. She died when she was twelveâleukemia.â He paused, and you could hear the slight hitch in his breathing. âShe was obsessed with those National Geographic documentaries, always making plans about all the places she wanted to seeâthe Andes in Peru, hiking the Highlands in Scotland, and seeing the Northern Lights in Iceland. She had this whole notebook full of destinations she wanted to visit, with pictures cut out from magazines.â
You didnât move, afraid even a shift might break the moment.
âShe never left Japan. Never even got on a plane. But the day before she died, she made me promise Iâd see the world for her. That Iâd go to all the places and tell her about them.â Another shaky breath. âSo I became a pilot. And every flight, every city, every sunset high above the cloudsâsheâs with me. I take pictures for her. Collect postcards.â His laugh barely held. âProbably sounds crazy.â
âIt doesnât sound crazy at all.â You sat up straighter in your chair and rolled your sleeves down, suddenly feeling the night airâs chill. âSo the postcards from ZurichâŚâ
âI brought one for her, and one for you. I thought... maybe youâd like it too.â
âFlight 447,â you said softly, unsure what else to do with the weight in your chest.
âShe wouldâve liked you,â he added. âShe always said the most important people are the ones who make you feel like homeâeven when youâre thirty thousand feet in the air, circling your home airport at in the middle of the night because you cannot land.â
You were silent for a while, unable to find words.
âControl? Can I ask you something else?â
ââŚYeah.â
âWould you like to go out with me?â
You didnât say anything at first. Didnât even breathe at first, hand hovering near the console, but instead of replying, you slowly set your headset down and stoodâlegs unsteady. You crossed the small space behind your chair, ran a hand through your hair, tried to get your lungs to work again.
You werenât ready. Not for this. Not for him sounding that sincere. He was still up there, circling in the dark, waiting for something you werenât sure you could give. You braced your hands on the edge of the desk, heart pounding, and finally lowered yourself back into the chair. Slipped the headset on again.
âIâŚâ you began, but the rest of the sentence never came. Your throat tightened too much.
âYou donât have to answer now. Just think about it, okay?â
Then Kaiâs voice cut through your main frequency. âControl Seven, runwayâs clear for your holding traffic.â
You switched back to the private frequency, your voice steadier than you felt.Â
âFlight 447, youâre cleared for approach, runway 24L. Wind 180 at 5 knots.â
âRoger, cleared for approach runway 24L.â
You hesitated, your finger trembling slightly on the radio button, then softly, âLand safe, Satoru.â
Silence stretched between you, each moment an unbearable weight as you waited for him to speak, with only the soft static of the frequency for company. When his voice finally came back, it was barely above a whisper.
âYouâre so unfair, Control. How am I supposed to sleep now that Iâve finally heard you say my name like that?â
Your chest tightened, a fragile tenderness settling in your chest, and you closed your eyes, lost in the sudden intimacy of the moment.
âSee you on the ground, Control⌠and sleep easy tonight.â
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
After that night, everything changed.
What had once been the most frustrating part of your job had quietly become the part you looked forward to most. You told yourself it was just the routine, the familiarity. A comforting voice between the chaos. But when Flight 447âs call sign popped up on your radar, your chest would do that stupid flutter before your brain could stop it. And the professional distance youâd worked so hard to maintain began crumbling piece by fragile piece.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting vectors, and good morning to my favorite controller.â
You didnât even try to hide your smile anymore. âGood morning, Captain. Turn left heading 180, descend and maintain 4,000.â
âHowâs that terrible tower coffee treating you today?â
âStill tastes like mud. But itâs keeping me awake.â
âYou really need someone to bring you proper coffee sometime.â
âFlight 447, contact Approach on 119.7.â
âWill do, beautiful. Save me a cup of that mud, will you?â
You caught yourself still smiling after heâd switched frequencies.Â
Your colleagues noticed the change immediately. Maki would glance over with that knowing grin the second his call sign blinked onto your screen. Sometimes she didnât even say anythingâjust raised her eyebrows and took a dramatically loud sip of her green tea.
Even Ijichi who was usually so quiet and reserved, seemed to soften. Now, heâd offer a small, genuinely happy smile when Satoruâs voice came through the speakers, like a younger brother observing something inevitable unfold.
The conversations with Satoru grew longer, more personal. Heâd tell you about the cities he flew toâthe morning mist over Pragueâs cobblestone streets, the way the late afternoon sunlight painted the Alps during his approach to Munich, the bustling markets in Vienna that smelled like roasted chestnuts and warm strudel.
âThereâs this little bakery in Prague,â he said once. âSells cinnamon sugar spirals on a stick that taste like sugar bread. I picked some up for you and will drop them by your gate when I land, though they might be a bit smushed from the flight, but I swear theyâre really good.â
You imagined him standing there, maybe still in his uniform, coffee in one hand and some pastry in the other, sunlight filtering through narrow European streets. You wished you couldâve been there with him.
One Tuesday evening, he came on frequency a few minutes early. âI saw the Northern Lights last night for the first time,â he said, skipping all pretense of small talk. âOver Helsinki. It looked incredible. I took about a hundred photos, even though they donât do it justice, but⌠I tried.â
âYour sister wouldâve loved that.â
âYeah. She would have.â His voice grew soft. âI wish you could have seen them too. With me.â
You hadnât planned on any of this. You didnât know where it was going. But every word felt a little easier than the last. Like you were building something one flight at a time, stitched together from shared late night conversations, shared silences, and a voice that had somehow made its way under your skin. And you hadnât even seen his face.
At some point, the flirting had stopped feeling like a game. You werenât sure when the shift happened, only that it had. One day you were rolling your eyes at his compliments, and the next⌠you caught yourself smiling before he even switched on the mic.
Heâd compliment your voice and your hair heâd never even seen, and youâd toss something sharp right back at his ego. Heâd ask about your day like it mattered, and youâd ask how the clouds looked up there in the sky.Â
Somewhere between the banter and clearance codes, you stopped resisting the warmth that bloomed in your chest every time he called you beautiful. Stopped pretending it didnât matter. Stopped pretending you didnât wait for his call sign, or feel the flutter in your stomach when he said your call sign like it was something heâd been waiting all day to say.
âYou sound tired today,â he said one afternoon, somewhere over the East China Sea, his voice laced with concern.
You stifled a yawn. âDouble shift. Someone called in sick.â
âThatâs the third time this month. You need to take better care of yourself.â
âIâm fine.â
âWhenâs the last time you took a day off? And I mean not just sleeping in because you worked late, but actually doing something for yourself?â
You paused, thought about it, and realized you couldnât remember.
âThat settles it. When I get back from the Zagreb route next week, weâre going somewhere. Somewhere with decent coffee and food that doesnât come from a vending machine.â
âIs that a request or a demand, Captain?â
âItâs a promise.â
Late night conversations on the private frequency became your favorite kind of bad habit. You told yourself you werenât abusing the systemâyou just happened to monitor 121.9 a little more closely on nights when you knew he was in the air.
When the tower thinned out to near silence, leaving only the hum of the monitors, and his overnight flights aligned perfectly with your shifts, you always found a reason to switch channels.
âCanât sleep up there?â youâd ask when his voice came through the static.
âAutopilotâs handling the boring parts. Thought Iâd check on my favorite insomniac instead.â
âIâm not an insomniac,â youâd say, leaning into the console, exhausted but smiling. âIâm working.â
âItâs 3 AM. You should be in bed, curled up with a blanket and binge some Netflix.â
âSomeoneâs gotta guide the pretty pilots through the night sky.â
He never missed a beat. âJust one pretty pilot in particular, I hope. Otherwise I might get jealous.â
And you let him win these little exchanges. Because the truth was, the static of 121.9 had quietly become where you truly felt yourself. A place where your voice softened, where the walls came down, where you werenât Control Sevenâyou were just you. Tired, overcaffeinated, sometimes frustrated with everythingâbut somehow still able to breathe easier when his voice filled your headset.
You didnât have a name for what was growing between youâbut it was there. Steady. Constant. Cruising at altitude and waiting for the moment one of you was brave enough to land.
Those conversations could last hoursâhim circling above the Pacific while you guided other aircraft, both of you stealing moments between official duties to talk about everything and nothing. Heâd tell you about passengers heâd met, youâd share stories about the quirky new controller in the tower. Heâd describe the view from his cockpit, youâd explain what the radar looked like from your perspective.
âDo you ever wonder what it would be like if weâd met differently?â he asked one night.
âHow do you mean?â
âIf I wasnât a pilot, and you werenât up in a tower. If we just... bumped into each other at a grocery store or something.â
âWould you have still talked my ear off about arctic birds?â
âProbably.â He laughed. âThough I might have started with the weather like a normal person.â
âI donât think you know how to be normal, Captain.â
You found yourself looking forward to his flights. When Flight 447 appeared on your radar, it was like a switch flipped on inside your chest. And when his route changed and he wasnât there you caught yourself glancing at the flight board more than necessary. If his flight was delayed by weather or mechanical issues, youâd feel it settle heavy in your chest like stones until his call sign appeared on your screen.
âMiss me?â heâd tease whenever your shifts missed each other and the silence stretched too long.
âYou wish.â
âI do, actually. Horribly.â
You rolled your eyes, even though he couldnât see it. âThe frequencyâs been blessedly quiet without you. You wouldnât believe how efficiently I can work without your constant interruptions.â
âLiar. You were bored as hell.â
âFlight 447, Iâm transferring you to Approach before your big ego causes your plane to crash.â
âDonât you think itâs a little to late for that, Control? Itâs this big since you said my name that one time.â
You groaned, pressing your palm to your forehead, but you were smiling. Always smiling. And he knew it. You both did. And pretending otherwise had started to feel pointless.
ââŚI missed you.â
You leaned forward, arms crossed on the edge of your console, and hunched your shoulders, trying to shake off the shiver that traced down your spine at the sound of his voice in your ear.
âApproach is waiting, Captain.â
A few weeks had passed since that first private frequency conversation, and you still hadnât given him a direct answer about the date. But somewhere between his stories about sunrises over the Himalayas and your chaotic work anecdotes, the question had become less about whether and more about when. Even if you didnât have the courage to admit it yet.
âSo,â he said one Thursday evening, while preparing for approach, âabout that dateâŚâ
Your heart stuttered in the smallest, stupidest way.
âI know a little cafĂŠ in Shibuya. Itâs away from the main tourist spots and makes the best matcha lattes in Tokyo. Perfect place for two hardworking colleagues to grab a coffee.â
âWe are colleagues, Flight 447.â
âColleagues who happen to enjoy each otherâs company.â
âColleagues who work together professionally.â
âColleagues who talk on private frequencies at 2 AM about the Northern Lights and their horrible exes.â His voice carried that familiar teasing note. âCome on, whatâs the worst that could happen? I promise not to talk about aircraft separation minimums the whole time.â
âThe worst that could happen is that it gets complicated.â
âItâs already complicated.â
You were quiet for a moment, knowing he was right. You shifted slightly in your chair, fingers idly twirling the cable of your headset.
âFlight 447, contact Approach on 119.7.â
âThe cafĂŠâs called Blue Mountain,â he said before switching. âSaturday afternoon. If youâre free.â
âIâll think about it.â
Later that night, you lay on your back in the dark, staring at the ceiling of your apartment as the last traces of twilight faded from deep purple to black outside your open window, and replayed every conversation, every laugh, every time heâd called you beautiful.
You were a grown woman. A professional. You managed emergencies, rerouted aircraft in storm systems, made decisions in mere seconds that kept hundreds of people safe every day.
And here you were. Heart in shambles over a man youâd never even seen in person.
It didnât make sense. Pilots are arrogant. Thatâs a universal truth youâd learned over the years in air traffic control. They walked through airports like they owned the sky, had egos the size of their aircraft, an attention span of a goldfish when it came to relationships, and probably a different girlfriend in every city.
Satoru was a pilot.Â
Therefore, by the sacred logic of the universe, he was a bad idea.
Youâd learned that lesson the hard wayâgiven your heart to people whoâd seemed so sure, so persistent, so convinced they wanted forever until they didnât. Until the reality of loving someone flawed and human became too much work, too complicated, too real.
But now here was himâpersistent, charming, relentless in his pursuit of something that existed only in radio waves and imagination. All he had was your voice and whatever fantasy heâd constructed around it. And fantasies, no matter how beautiful, eventually shattered when they met reality.
You didnât know much about him. Not his favorite movie, or if he was the type to do laundry right away or leave it on a chair for three days. You didnât know who broke his heart last, or what he looked like when he was nervous. You didnât even know if he wore glasses or if his hair curled when it rained.
For all you knew, he talked like this to every controller on every route. Maybe you were just one more frequency heâd tuned into. A novelty. A nice voice to pass the time.
Yet you knew he brought you gifts from cities youâd never visited. You knew he worried when you worked too many hours. You knew he talked to his dead sister through postcards and photographs, and somehow let you be a part of that grief. You knew the sound of his breathing thirty thousand feet above you, and sometimes wished you could fall asleep to it.
But this wasnât real. Whatever this wasâchemistry, attraction, some strange radio wave Stockholm syndromeâit couldnât be real. Real relationships required proximity, shared experiences, mundane Tuesday mornings and arguments over who left the bathroom light on. Not conversations between approach vectors and weather reports in the middle of the night.
Heâd never seen you laugh until your sides hurt, never witnessed you cry out of frustration. He didnât know that you were shy in crowds, that you overthought everything, that you had trust issues wrapped around your heart like scar tissue.
This was in between. A connection built in the air, not on the ground. And you were being smart by saying no. You were being practical. Responsible. You were doing what made sense.
But why did the idea of never knowing the warmth of his hand in yours make your chest ache like you were already grieving something that hadnât even had the chance to exist?
You rolled onto your side, pulled the covers up higher, and pressed your face into the pillow.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
It was one of those graveyard shifts where the world felt like it had gone still. Most of the world was asleep, save for you, a few stray cargo flights, and the quiet static of Flight 447 holding steady somewhere over the ocean. And him. Always him.
You were back on private frequency. What began, as it always did, with talk of altitudes and airspeed, soon shifted to stories of cities and people heâd met in Dublin and that little bakery heâd found in Budapest, that heâs sure of youâd love.
And then he told you about his ex-girlfriend whoâd left him because she couldnât handle the distance, the loneliness of hotel rooms. He spoke of his parents, whoâd always expected him to run the familyâs company, and how they still didnât understand why heâd chosen to spend his life in the sky.
You found yourself sharing more than you probably should, as you always did in these hushed momentsâyour failed engagement to a man whoâd wanted you to quit air traffic control because it was âtoo stressfulâ, your complicated relationship with your mother, and how sometimes, even now, it still felt like your worth came with conditions.
âIâve never told anyone that before,â you said softly after confessing how youâd chosen this career partly to prove you could handle something your ex-fiancĂŠ thought was too difficult for you.
âI'm glad you told me,â Satoruâs voice was soft through the headset. And despite the exhaustion, your chest gave that familiar, traitorous flutter. âI love listening to your voice, especially when youâre being honest about things that matter.â
âSatoruâŚâ you said, without thinkingâhis name slipping out in a whisper that carried more weight than it should have.
âSay that again.â
âYour name?â
âYes,â he breathed, the single word aching. âPlease.â
You hesitated. Not because you didn't want toâbut because speaking it aloud meant acknowledging the weight it carried.
âSatoru,â you said again, slower this time. His name felt warm on your tongue, like something meant to be spoken softly, like a confession wrapped in a name.
On the other end of the line, silence stretched long enough to make your heart stutter.
âSatoru?â you asked. âAre you there?â
âIâm here. I was just⌠thinking.â
âAbout what?â
A beat.
âAbout how much I want to kiss you right now.â
Your breath caught so fast it hurt. Heat flooded your face and you pulled your headset off for a moment, pressing your palms against your burning cheeks.
You stood for a second, pacing a few slow steps behind your chair, trying to shake it off, to convince yourself you hadnât heard what you just heard. But your heart wouldnât stop racing, a wild bird trapped in your ribs, like your body was reacting to something your mind hadnât even begun to process, let alone given permission for.
Because part of you had desperately wanted to hear those words. And part of you didnât know what the hell to do with them now that they were real. You stared at the headset in your lap, hesitating. Wanting. Dreading.
After a few seconds, you slipped the headset back on.
âDid I scare you with that?â
âNo,â you said quietly. âItâs⌠itâs fine.â
âI mean it, you know. I really do want to kiss you.â
âThis is insane. Weâve never even met.â
âIt doesnât feel that way to me. Feels like Iâve known you forever.â
His words settled deep, heavier than the silence that followed. Something about them felt like a confession hanging between earth and sky, between personal and professional, between safe and what if.
âSatoruâŚâ
âI know how you take your coffee. I know how you sound when youâre tired, and what makes you laugh when youâre trying not to. I know you bite your lip when youâre concentratingâbecause I can hear it in your voice. And I know you put everyone else ahead of yourself even when you shouldnât. I know enough to care. And enough to want more.â A pause. âWhat else do I need to know?â
âWhat I look like, for starters.â
âI donât care.â
âYou donât care?â
âNo, because itâs your voice I think about at night. Thatâs what drew me in. The rest⌠it never mattered.â
You sat there, heartbeat loud in your ears, not sure how to breathe, let alone how to respond.
âSay something,â he whispered. âPlease.â
âI donât know what to say.â
âSay youâll have coffee with me. Say youâll give me a chance to see the woman Iâve fallen for.â
Your breath caught again. âFallen for?â you repeated, like maybe saying it aloud would help you believe it.
âYes. Completely, hopelessly fallen for.â
Your hands liftedâwithout thinking, almost desperateâand pressed against the headset like you could pull his voice closerâpull him closer. Part of you wanted him to say it again. Needed to hear it, to make sure it was real. And another part wished he hadnât said it at all. Because now it was alive between you. Irrevocable.
âIâŚâ You stopped, swallowed, tried again. âI have toââ You panicked and switched back to the main frequency. âIjichi? Can you take over Flight 447 for me? I need to step out for a second.â
âEverything okay?â Ijichiâs voice sounded concerned.
âYeah,â you said. âJust need a bathroom break.â
You yanked the headset off and fled to the small restroom down the hall, slammed the lock shut, and leaned back against the door as if afraid his words might follow you in.
You turned on the faucet, splashing cold water onto your face. Droplets clung to your lashes and slid down your neck. Still, the heat in your skin wouldnât go away, chest rising and falling too fast.
What is happening?Â
He couldnât be serious. He couldnât just⌠fall for your voice. That wasnât how this worked. That wasnât how any of this worked. You hadnât even met him. You didnât know what his laugh looked like when it reached his eyes. He didnât know how you looked when you werenât exhausted. And yetâ
Yet here you were, breathless in a dim airport bathroom in the middle of the night, heart racing like you were the one whoâd made the confession.
This is insane. He is a pilot. Probably talks like this to every other control tower from Berlin to Bangkok. But whyâGod, whyâdid you want to kiss him back so badly?
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
You took a week off without telling him.
It was cruelâyou knew that. But you needed time. Time to breathe. Time to think. Time to stop feeling like you were going to fly apart every time you heard his voice. But distance didnât feel like space. It felt like ache.
You spent most of that week alone in your apartment, curled into corners of yourself you hadnât visited in years. You rearranged your bookshelves. Watered your plants twice in one day. Cleaned your windows until they gleamed like they havenât in years.Â
And still, none of it helped. You ended up lying on your back in your bed, just⌠thinking. Wondering if he was worried. If he noticed the silence. If he regretted saying what he did.
You replayed the conversation endlessly, like a scratched record stuck on the moment his voice had dropped, tender and fragile with something like a confession.Â
Completely, hopelessly fallen for.Â
You could still hear it. Still feel the way your lungs had stuttered.
You hadnât meant to fall for him. But you had.
Maybe it started the moment he told you that your voice felt like coming home to him. Or maybe it was the first time he opened up about his sister, the way his voice caught halfway through the sentence, like he was still learning how to hold that grief in his mouth. Or maybe it was even before that, when he brought you chocolate from Zurich and called you special to customs agents heâd never meet again.
You wanted to kiss him then. You want to kiss him now. And that terrified you more than anything. Not because it wasnât real, but because youâd wanted it to be real for so long without even realizing. But wanting and admitting were two different things.Â
So instead, you wrapped yourself in quiet and waited for the ache to fade. It didnât. You thought it would. You thought time would create space, and space would give you clarity. But it didnât, and the ache only grew stronger.
By day three, you caught yourself checking the flight tracking apps, wondering if he was flying the skies above you, if his voice was somewhere out there asking another controller for vectors. If heâd call them âbeautifulâ too.
By day four, you were questioning whether radio silence was mature or just cowardly, and by day five, you were actively pacing your apartment, cursing yourself for disappearing and cursing him for making you feel this way in equal measures.
You heard the familiar drone of an aircraft passing overhead through your open window and stopped your pacing instantly, tilting your head toward the sound as it grew louder, then began to fade.
Was that him? His flight cutting through the darkness with some other controller guiding him home? Someone elseâs voice in his headset? The thought made you sick.
Your phone buzzed against the kitchen counter. A text from Maki. âYour pilot boyfriend keeps asking where you are.â
You stared at the message for a long time. Not because you didnât care, but because you didnât know what to say. Because how could you possibly say I miss him without it sounding like you were already halfway in love. And maybe you were.
****
You returned on day six. Not because you were ready, or because the questions had answers, or your chest had stopped aching when his name passed through your thoughts, but because Tokyoâs sky was falling apart and there was no more time left to hide.
The call came at 3:42 AMâall available controllers needed immediately. Level four emergency.
You barely had time to pull on your uniform, hair still damp from the shower, as you rushed past stranded passengers sleeping on benches and gate agents with phones pressed to both ears, while overhead an urgent announcement looped in four languages.Â
A massive weather front had swept across the Pacific, turning Tokyoâs airspace into chaos. Delayed flights, emergency diversions, aircraft running low on fuel circling in holding patterns, waiting for safe corridors to open. But when you reached your workstation, you stopped.
Flowers.Â
A small, beautiful arrangement of white roses and babyâs breath in a clear glass vase.
âHe sends them every day,â Maki said, appearing beside you with a stack of weather reports. âAsks if someone can place them on your desk. In case you come back.â
You couldnât speak, only stared at the petals, watching one tremble in the air conditioning draft. Something fragile inside your chest pulled taut.Â
Six days.Â
Heâd been sending flowers to an empty chair for six days.
âYou okay?â Maki asked.
âIâm good,â you managed, swallowing hard. âI need toââ But there was no time.Â
âTower, this is Flight 892, requesting immediate vectors around weather cell bearing 270.â
For the next three hours, there was no room left for feelings. You were too busy handling all the alternate airport requests, fuel emergencies, and missed approaches that required immediate rerouting.
âFlight 315, turn right heading 180, descend to 8,000. Moderate turbulence ahead, advise caution.â
âFlight 726, negative climb, maintain 12,000. Traffic conflict. Standby for alternate routing.â
Every call you answered felt like a life being tossed into your hands. You held on tight. You didnât shake. At least, not on the outside.Â
A sudden, blinding flash from outside momentarily bleached the room, then plunged it back into deeper shadow as rain lashed heavily against the towerâs windows.
And then, between the tangle of signals and storm interference, a call sign you knew like your own name lit up your screen.Â
Flight 447.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting vectors through weather, andââ He pausedâlike heâd caught the shaky breath you hadnât meant to let slip through. âControl, is that you?â
It shouldnât have undone you like that. But it did. Your knees went weak under your console. Relief flooded through you at the sound of his voice, alive and safe. Your throat tightened around a dozen things you wanted to say, but there was no time.
âFlight 447, turn left heading 090, descend to 6,000. Thereâs a gap in the storm cell at your two oâclock.â
âRoger, left 090, down to 6,000.â A beat. âItâs good to hear your voice again.â
You wanted to respond, to explain, to apologize for disappearing like a coward, but four other aircraft were calling for attention at the same time and the storm was intensifying still.
âFlight 447, be advised, severe turbulence ahead. Recommend immediate deviation right, heading 130.â
âNegative, weâre already committed to this approach. Weâll ride itââ
Then nothing. The radio snapped to static, then went silent.
You stood up so fast your chair rolled backward and bumped into the console behind you. One hand clutched the headset tighter to your ear, the other braced against your desk.
âFlight 447, come in.â
No response.
âSatoru, do you copy?â
Still nothing. Only white noise.
Lightning split the sky outside, followed by a deep, rattling roar of thunder that vibrated through the control room. But all you could hear was the terrifying silence where his voice shouldâve been.
Your hand trembled as you keyed the mic. âFlight 447, please respond.â
Then, finally, cutting through the noise, âControl. Iâm here. Lost comms for a moment there.â
You sank back into your chair like your legs had stopped working, the adrenaline suddenly too much to hold. You rested your forearms on the edge of the console, hands trembling slightly as you leaned in, pressing your forehead against them, trying to steady the frantic beat of your heart against your ribs.Â
âWhatâs with the silence now,â he whispered softly. âWere you worried about me, love?â
Love.
Heâd never said that before. Beautiful, gorgeous, honeyâbut never this. Not like that. Not so soft and tender, like youâd been his love for so long that saying it was simply acknowledging what already existed, what had been waiting patiently in his chest for the right moment to slip free. And never had you been so stupidly, helplessly happy to hear a single word.
He is alive. He is safe. And heâd called you love.
âFlight 447, confirm youâre okay.âÂ
âWeâre fine. Bumpy ride, but nothing we canât handle.â
Neither of you said anything for a moment.
âIâve missed you.â
Your throat tightened. Six days of silence. Six days of waiting, wondering, and avoiding the thing you were most afraid to admit. Six days of white roses waiting for your return, and here he was, relieved to hear your voide again like you were something precious heâd thought heâd lost.Â
As if your absence had mattered.Â
As if heâd missed you the way youâd missed him.
âThank you,â you said. âFor the flowers.â
âYou donât have to thank me. Just⌠donât go quiet on me again, okay? Itâs hard to feel like Iâm coming home when youâre not the one guiding me there.â
You closed your eyes, the ache blooming hot behind your ribs. Coming home. How could he say things like that so easily? How could he make you feel like you were drowning and flying at the same time with just a handful of words spoken through radio static?
And the worst part was how easily he said itâlike you really were his home, his anchor point in all that vast sky. Like this thing between you wasnât just something imagined, but something real enough to miss, something worth coming back to.
âI wonât,â you said, barely above a whisper.
âPromise?â
âI promise.â
And you meant it. Whatever had made you run, whatever fear had driven you to take that week offâit felt so stupidly irrelevant compared to the relief of knowing he was safe. Of knowing somewhere above the clouds, heâd been looking for your voice.
âSee you on the ground, beautiful.â
And then the line went silent.
Your eyes stayed locked on his radar symbol, unwilling to look away, tracking his descent as if your gaze alone could guide him safely down. Your eyes drifted to the flowers beside your console, your chest tight with guilt because youâd been too much of a coward to face what you felt for him.Â
What was holding you back when he was right there? Wanting you, missing you enough to notice your absence, calling you love so tenderly. What was so terrifying about someone who made you feel like the most important voice in his sky?
He missed you. Wanted you. And you missed him like the sky misses his stars in daylight. Now he was descending through storm clouds, almost within reach, and you still didnât know how to say any of it.
You watched his altitude drop.
8,000 feet.Â
6,000.
4,000.
Each number bringing him closer to solid groundâcloser to you.
Then another violent gust tore across the runway. A sharp gasp cut through the tower, everyone suddenly stood and looked out the windows as Flight 447 broke through the storm clouds, lurching violently sideways. The planeâs wings tilted at a sickening angle, fighting against the crosswind as it dropped like a stone before catching itself.
Your heart flatlined.
âMaki, can you cover for me?â you asked, voice tight, already moving.
She looked away from the window. âWhat? Yeah, butââÂ
You were gone. Down the tower stairs, past security who barely glanced at your badge, through the restricted access door and straight into the teeth of the storm. Didnât matter that you were soaking wet or that this was completely against protocol. All you knew was you had to see him.
Rain hit you immediately like ice, instantly soaking through your uniform, but you didnât slow. Across the runway, Flight 447 was coming in hard. You watched it slam onto the wet asphaltâone heavy bounce, then another, the aircraft struggling to find purchase on the waterlogged asphalt before finally coming to a halt with a loud screech of brakes.
Not a crash. But rough enough to stop your breathing.
You ran faster, shoes splashing through puddles as emergency crews rushed past you toward the plane. The aircraft had stopped crooked on the runway, passenger stairs already being rolled into position as ground crew in bright orange vests hurried around the scene.
 It was stupid, so stupid. You didnât even know what he looked like. But thenâ
You saw him. For the first time in your life.
He stepped out of the cockpit door, tall and undeniably handsome even amidst the chaos. His hair was drenched form the rain, plastered back from his forehead, his pilotâs uniform soaked and wrinkled. He was looking around slowly, searching through the crowd with a furrowed brow and eyes the exact impossible blue youâd somehow always known theyâd be. And thenâ
And then his gaze found yours. And everything stopped. No thunder. No wind. No roar of engines or shouts from the crew.
Your eyes met across the storm, and the world fell away. You had never seen this man before, but it didnât feel that way. It felt like remembering. There was no question, no doubt, no moment of uncertaintyâyou knew it was him the same way you knew your own heartbeat.
The voice youâd fallen for belonged to this man, this beautiful and insufferable pilot who was staring at you like heâd just found something heâd been searching for his entire life.Â
And now heâd found you.
You ran toward him through the chaos, feet splashing through more puddles, rain streaming down your face. He moved toward you too, taking the metal steps down from the plane two at a time, his hand sliding along the wet railing.Â
You met in the middle of the runway, both out of breath, both drenched to the bone. Rain clung to his white lashes as he stared at youâthose impossible blue eyes youâd imagined a hundred times now real, locked on your face like you were the only thing in the world. And yes, they were just as blue as a winter sky. Up close, he was somehow even more beautiful than youâd let yourself believe.
You opened your mouth, then closed it again, suddenly at a complete loss for words. âWould you like to go out with me?â you finally managed, having to raise your voice over the wind and rain.
Satoru blinked, his hair plastered against his forehead. A slow, handsome smile spread across his face.
âYeah,â he said, voice rough with emotion. âIâd really like that.â
And then he was moving, one hand sliding around your waist while the other came up to cradle your face, thumb brushing away raindropsâor maybe tears, you couldnât tell anymore. He pulled you closer, bridging the last inches like heâd been waiting forever to do it.
When he kissed you, it was like coming home after being lost for years. Desperate and tender, months of longing finally given form. His lips were impossibly soft against yours, warm despite the cold rain, and you could taste the storm on his mouth, feel the way his breath caught when you kissed him back.
Rain poured around you as you finally, finally kissed the voice that had become your everything.
When you broke apart, both breathless, he rested his forehead against yours. His hands trembled slightly where they held you, like he still couldnât believe this was real.
âGod, youâre so beautiful,â he whispered.
Then he was kissing you again, deeper this time, pouring months of missed chances and sleepless nights into the space between your lips. His grip tightened on your waist. Without breaking the kiss, he lifted from the ground and spun once, twice, in the pouring rain like you weighed nothing at all.
Storm clouds churned overhead and emergency crews moved around you, but it felt like you were the only two people in the worldâsuspended in this perfect moment between earth and sky and the the feeling of finally being found.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
A few weeks later.
âCareful with that,â Satoru warned as you briefly touched a panel of switches, his hand catching your wrist gently. âUnless you want to explain to the airline why we accidentally activated the emergency slides in the hangar.â
You were perched in the captainâs seat of his Boeing 777, legs tucked beneath you as you took in the array of countless instruments, screens, and controls that made up his office thirty thousand feet above the ground. The cockpit was smaller than youâd imagined, more intimate, every surface covered with buttons and displays that somehow made sense to him.
âYou actually understand all of this?â
âEach and every switch, gauge, and warning light.â He leaned over you from where he stood beside the captainâs seat, his chest brushing your shoulder as he pointed to different instruments. âSee this? Itâs the primary flight displayâshows our altitude, airspeed, heading. Thatâs the navigation display, weather radar hereâŚâ
You could smell his cologne, feel the warmth of his body as he leaned in closer to point out the next display. You loved watching him like thisâthe way he lit up when talking about his aircraft, completely absorbed in every detail with that endearing kinda nerdy side of his. But being this close to him made it hard to focus on anything he was saying when all you could think about was the way his voice rumbled low near your ear.
âAnd this,â he continued, reaching around you to tap a small screen, his arm caging you in against the seat, âshows exactly how beautiful my air traffic controller looks in my chair.â
You turned to find his face inches from yours. His sky blue eyes caught the gentle light like glass, impossibly clear, and for a second, you forgot how to breathe.
âThatâs not what that screen shows.â
âNo? Then why canât I look away from it?â
âYouâre stupid.â But you were smiling, tilting your head back against the headrest to maintain eye contact. âShow me something else.â
âDemanding little controller.â His fingers trailed along the overhead panel, flipping switches as he spoke. âThese control cabin pressure, air conditioning, electrical systemsâŚâ
You sank deeper into the chair, letting his soothing voice wash over you.
âThese are the autopilot controls.â His hand moved again. âThis button engages the systemâbasically tells the plane to fly itself according to the flight plan weâve programmed.â His finger moved to another switch. âThis one controls altitude hold, and this manages our heading.â
âBut hereâs the most important thing.â Satoru reached toward a small compartment near the instrument panel and pulled out a photo of the two of you from that stormy nightâcompletely drenched, kissing in the rain. It was blurry as hell and underexposed, and absolutely perfect.
âI still canât believe Hana managed to get this shot,â you said, taking it from him. âShe really thought âOh, what a perfect time for a pictureâ while there was literally an emergency evacuation going on.â
Satoru laughed. âBut arenât you gald she took it?â
âWe look absolutely stupid.âÂ
Your hair was plastered to your face, his uniform wrinkled and soaked, but you both looked happy. Really happy.
âYou look perfect,â he said, leaning closer. âAnd you were so cute when you had that total meltdown thinking something happened to me.â
âI did not have a meltdownââ
âYou ran across an active runway. In a storm.â He traced the edge of the photo with his finger, smiling. âMy professional, composed controller lost her cool because she was worried about her pilot.â
âYouâre insufferable.â
âIâm just sayingââ He leaned back against the instrument panel, clearly enjoying this. âFor someone who spent months pretending to hate my guts, you certainly changed your mind when you thought I might be hurt.â
âI was worried about you.â
His smile softened. âYou didnât have to.â He paused, then reached out, gently cupping your face. âNo matter how rough the storm or the landing, Iâm never really lostânot when I know youâre there. You always guide me home safely.â
âYouâre stupid.â
âStupidly in love, yeah,â he murmuredâand then he kissed you.
What started soft and slow quickly turned heated. You pulled him closer by his tie, and he braced his hand against the seat beside your head, his tongue sliding against yours as his mouth pressed hungrily to yours.
âController,â Satoru said between kisses, his voice already rough. âWhat exactly are you starting here?â
âIâm not starting anything,â you said, even though your fingers were already working his tie loose.
âClearly.â
You rose from the chair and tugged gently at his loosened tie and he followed without resistance. With a gentle push to his chest, you guided him down into the captainâs seat. He let himself fall back into it, eyes locked on yours. Without a word, you climbed into his lap, straddling him. His hands found your waist immediately, pulling you close as his mouth met yours again like he couldnât stand another second apart.
âMy breakâs over in fifteen,â you murmured against his lips. âAnd the planeâs grounded for another hour. No one should be around.â
He pulled back just enough to give you a look. âWait⌠did you check the maintenance schedule before coming here?â
âMaybe.â
âGod,â he groaned against your mouth, his hands gliding up your back. âDo you even know what you do to me?â
âIâm just making efficient use of our time, Captain,â you whispered, rolling your hips slightly and feeling him tense beneath you. âIsnât that what good air traffic control is about? Proper scheduling and all that?â
His laugh came out breathless, strained. âPretty sure this isnât in any manual Iâve read.â
âThen I guess youâll have to improvise.â You threaded your fingers through his white hair and pulled him closer. âYouâre good at handling unexpected situations, arenât you?â
Whatever he was about to say dissolved as he caught your lips again, urgency building in the small space between your bodies. One hand slipped beneath your shirt, warm fingers tracing the curve of your lower back, while the other gripped your thigh possessively.
You started undoing the buttons of his shirt with trembling fingers, impatience bleeding into every movement. Fabric slipped from his shoulders as you pushed it off. You pressed your hands against his bare chest, feeling the rapid thud of his heartbeat under your palms and traced slowly down over his abs, earning a rough groan of his against your lips.
âWhy do I get the feeling this was your plan all along?âÂ
Satoru tugged at your shirt, easing it off your shoulders as his lips trailed along your collarbone, then down to the strap of your bra, pushing it aside to press kisses to the skin beneath.
âSays the man undressing me in his cockpit,â you managed, though your voice caught when his mouth found your neck and sucked lightly.
âI canât believe you let me ramble about navigation systems for ten minutes straight when this was your plan.â
âYouâre cute when youâre being all professional and nerdy.â
âYouâre terrible.âÂ
His hands gripped your hips, pulling you closer until you could feel him hard and pressing through his uniform. A soft sound escaped your lips before you could stop it, and his mouth crashed back onto yours, like he was trying to steal every moan before it left your lips.
âCareful. Donât want us getting caught, right?â
You barely heard him. Your hands dropped to his belt, leather unfastening fast. It didnât take long to push aside everything that wasnât necessary. You were both nothing if not efficient, after all. And the last threads of restraint snapped as Satoruâs hands slid up your bare thighs, fingers hooking beneath your underwear and pulling it aside.
His head tipped back against the seat, breath catching as you moved against him. âFuck,â he whispered, hands gripping your waist and pulling you closer as you found your rhythm together. His mouth on yours again, swallowing the soft sounds neither of you could hold back.
Surrounded by the controls and countless displays, the cockpit windows slowly fogging from your heated breathing, you couldnât help but think about how it all started. This was where it beganâthirty thousand feet above the world, suspended between earth and sky in the place where his voice had first found yours. From that very first radio call, from the moment heâd called you beautiful, it had always been leading here.Â
As if inevitable.
Now, with your hands mapping his skin and your name falling from his lips in soft moans, it felt like coming full circle. From air traffic control to this. From âFlight 447â to âSatoru.â From guiding him home to finally being home.
And that felt pretty damn good.
ââ ⢠¡â¸â¸
Six months later.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting permission to land and take my gorgeous girlfriend out for dinner tonight,â came the voice you loved through your headset, smooth as always despite the late hour.
You rolled your eyes, though you smiled. âFlight 447, you do realize the entire tower can hear you, right?â
âEven better. Let them all know how lucky I am.â
Around the control tower, your colleagues had long since stopped pretending to be annoyed by Satoruâs radio flirtations. Maki still teased you about how cute you both sounded over the frequency, and even Ijichi had gotten used to the intimate banter without blushing like a teenage boy whoâd accidentally walked into a lingerie store.
The gifts never stopped coming. From Vilnius, heâd brought a handwritten pierogi recipe from an elderly woman heâd chatted with during his layoverâand it was surprisingly good when he made it for you on the weekend. He did not lie when he told you heâs a good cook.Â
From Faro came a hand painted pot for the basil plant youâd surely kill again, but it didnât matter as heâd secretly replace it in the middle of the night so youâd think youâd finally managed to keep a plant alive and see your happy smile. Seville brought oranges heâd handpicked from the city gardens, and Barcelona brought a gorgeous Picasso art book.
And, of course, every trip came with two postcards. One for you, and one for his sister. Youâd started framing the ones meant for her and hanging them throughout his apartment for him.
âYou know you donât have to bring me something from every city,â youâd told him after heâd brought more expensive chocolate from Zurich.
âLet me spoil my girl,â heâd replied simply, watching you take a bite. âBesides, all you see is that boring tower all day. You deserve a little treat.â
The radio banter had only gotten worseâor better, depending on your perspective.
âTower, Flight 447 requesting vectors to your heart.â
âFlight 447 keep it professional or Iâm diverting you to Osaka.â
âOof. Brutal. But if you send me to Osaka, youâll never see what I brought you from Rome.â
Your colleagues had started keeping a list of his most ridiculous radio calls. âFlight 447 requesting visual on the prettiest controller in the hemisphereâ was Makiâs current favorite, while Ijichi still cringed about the time Satoru had asked for âRequesting altitude adjustment because I just fell for youâagain.â
Yeah. It was absolutely cheesy.
Moving in together happened gradually, then all at once. Your clothes moved to his closet, your coffee mugs replaced all of his ugly ones in the kitchen, and suddenly your shift schedule was magnetted to his refrigerator beside his flight rotations. One day, you realized you were planning your lives around each other without ever having had the conversation.
âYour apartmentâs bigger,â youâd pointed out, when you finally made it official.
âYours has the better balcony. But mineâs closer to the airport.â
âSo, your place then. But Iâm bringing my good coffee maker.â
âAnd wonât let me see that adorable little wince you do at my terrible coffee in the morning? Youâre heartless.â
But the real adjustment wasnât space or schedules. It was learning each otherâs bodies with the same intensity youâd spent months learning each otherâs voices. After all, with falling in love through radio static, there was a lot of missed physical intimacy to make up for.
Some weekends you didnât even make it out of your shared apartment, too consumed with discovering each other all over again. Your back hit the mattress with a soft thud, sheets warm beneath you as he settled over you, pressing kisses to your jaw, your neck, your collarbone like he couldnât decide where to focus first.
âI used to fantazise about this,â he murmured between kisses.
âAbout what?â
âThis.â His voice dropped lower, lips bruising your throat. âWhat youâd sound like when you werenât trying so hard to be professional⌠imagining the sounds youâre making now, how youâd moan my name with that pretty voice of yours.â
You pulled him closer, lips finding his again, his tongue hot against yours.
 âYeah?â
He smiled against your mouth. âYou have no idea how many nights I imagined the taste of your skin. How many times I lay awake wondering if your thighs would shake when I fucked you hard enough.â
Your breath stuttered, hands gripping his shoulders like they were the only steady thing left. âGood thing weâve got time now to find out.â
âYeah. And I plan on making up for all of it,â he whisperedâjust before his fingers slipped between your thighs, and you forgot how to speak altogether.
And you did make up for lost time. Learning that he was somehow even more affectionate and thorough in person than over the radio.Â
In the quiet of your bedroom, with the curtains drawn and the world hushed beyond the walls, you discovered each other slowly. Â
How he always shivered when you traced patterns across his abs. How you had a small scar just below your ribcage from a childhood fall that he found with his lips, kissing along your skin until you arched beneath him. How your body tensed and then melted completely when his mouth worked between your legs, drawing sounds from you that made him groan against your skin.
You learned the weight of his arm draped over you, holding you close when he was moving from behind, and how soothing it felt when his fingers traced lazy patterns on your shoulder until sleep claimed you both. Discovered that lazy morning sex, followed by his surprisingly good scrambled eggs, was the perfect way to start any day.
You spent hours like this, days even, learning the language of each otherâs bodies with a thoroughness that left no inch unexplored and no fantasy unfulfilled.
âYou know,â he said one evening, pulling you into his lap while you tried to review approach procedures on the couch, âI spent so many nights wondering what it would be like to touch you while you worked.â
âAnd now?â
âNow I get to find out what happens when I do thisââ His lips found that sensitive spot on your neck, making you gasp and completely forget what youâd been reading. âWhile youâre trying to be all professional.â
âThatâs unfair.â
âThatâs what makes it fun.â
The night everything changed started like any other. Weather delays had backed up traffic for hours, leaving Satoru circling above the Pacific in a holding pattern while you worked through the endless stream of aircraft. It was past midnight, the tower hushed and dim, when you finally switched to private frequency.
âBored up there, Captain?â
âNever bored when Iâm talking to you. Though I was thinkingâŚâ
âDangerous pastime for you.â
âWeâre both stuck here for the next few hours. You, managing this beautiful chaos from your tower. Me, alone with the stars at thirty thousand feet.â His voice carried that familiar warmth that always made something flutter in your chest. âFeels like the perfect date to me.â
You ended up talking for three hours, switching between official vectors and private topics, guiding other aircraft while Satoru described the city lights below and the way clouds shimmered like winter frost in the moonlight.
âStrange how this all started, donât you think?â you mused during a quiet moment. âTwo voices falling for each other over radio frequency.â
âYouâre not having second thoughts, are you?â
âNo. Itâs just⌠kind of crazy, isnât it? All of this.â
He was silent for a beat. When he spoke again, his voice was differentânervous, almost fragile.
âCan I ask you something?â
âOf course.â
âWill you marry me?â
Your heart stopped.
âI know itâs not how this is supposed to go. I know itâs not normal. But then again, nothing about us has been. Iâm thirty thousand feet in the air, youâre down there keeping the world together, and all I can think about is how much I want to spend the rest of my life with you.â
Time stretched thin in the control room as you struggled to process what heâd just asked, your heart thundering so loud you were sure he could hear it through the frequency.
âYes,â you whispered, the word barely more than a breath as you leaned forward, elbows braced against the console. Your hands trembled as you pressed them to your face, overwhelmed by the rush of joy and disbelief.
âYes?â
âYes. Iâll marry you.â
He let out a heavy breath. âGod, I love you. You just made me the happiest man alive. I swear, if I could pull down every star from up here and give them to you, I would.â
You blinked back tears, smiling. âJust come home safe, you idiot.â
âAlways,â he said, and his voice had never sounded more sure. âYour voice guides me home, remember? It always has.â
You thought youâd mapped every corner of him after six months of living togetherâevery habit, every sleepy morning routine, every sound he makes when he cums.
But then came the private jet revelation over scrambled eggs on a random Friday morning.
Youâd known he came from moneyâthe expensive gifts, the way he never seemed to stress about finances and had this really fancy apartmentâbut you hadnât grasped the scale until he casually mentioned his fatherâs company owned a fleet of corporate aircraft.
âI was thinking we should take some time off and explore the world a little,â he said, like offering to fly you around the world was the same as suggesting takeout for dinner. âWe could take one of the jets.â
âWait wait wait⌠you have access to a private jet?â
âTechnically, I have access to several.â
Your spoon slipped out of your hand and landed in your eggs.
The first time he took you somewhereâa long weekend in Kyoto for cherry blossom seasonâyou finally understood why heâd fallen in love with flying.Â
Up there, suspended between heaven and earth, everything felt different. The world spread out below like a map, cities reduced to scattered lights and rivers threading silver through green landscapes. You watched his hands move over the controls, the same hands that traced gentle patterns on your skin at night, now guiding you both through layers of cloud and sky.
âSo this is what you see every day?â you asked, staring out at clouds that looked close enough to touch.
âThis is what I used to see.â He glanced over at you. âNow I only see you.â
It started with short weekend trips, then longer stays overseas when both your schedules allowed it. He took you everywhere you wanted to go.
Venice, he bought you both gelato and told you stories about the Murano glass blowers. Barcelona, where you got lost in Gaudiâs wild architecture and found tiny tapas bars nestled in medieval alleyways. And Iceland, where the Northern Lights painted the sky green and purple while you kissed in a natural hot springâfinally experiencing all the places heâd described to you over radio waves. But now you experienced them together.
âYour sister would have loved this,â you said Reykjavik, wrapped in his arms under the dancing aurora.
âShe would have loved you,â he replied, pulling you closer in the warm water. âShe always said the best adventures were the ones you shared with someone who made you feel at home.â
âRemember when you used to tell me about this place?â you asked one evening in Prague, watching him order those cinnamon sugar spirals from the same bakery heâd told you about months ago over the radio.
He handed you the warm pastry with a smile. âI remember wishing you were here when I first tried it. I used to imagine what youâd say about the cobblestones, or if youâd laugh at my terrible pronunciation when I tried to order something local.â
You took a bite, sugar melting on your tongue. âAnd now?â
âNow I get to see your face when you taste it for the first time.â He pulled you close, the golden hour painting everything warm around you. âNow I get to hold your hand instead of describing how the sunset looks over the Charles Bridge. I donât have to imagine anymore.â
Each trip revealed new layers of himâand new ways to make up for all those months of being just voices to each other.Â
Somewhere over the Atlantic, you learned just how good he was at multitaskingâokay, autopilot might have helpedâhis hands tangled in your hair, mouth on yours, while the stars streaked past the windows. Long afternoons in Parisian hotel rooms, rain drumming against the windows while you learned exactly how sensitive he gets when overstimulated. Sunset on private beaches in Thailand, where he discovered the sweet sounds you make when he uses three fingers instead of two.Â
âI used to get hard just from hearing your voice,â he admitted one night in Santorini, pushing in deep while the Aegean sparkled below your terrace.
âJust from my voice?â
âEspecially when youâd get that stern controller tone. âFlight 447, maintain current heading.ââ His breath caught as you clenched around him, fingers finding yours and intertwining where he pressed them into the mattress. âYou have no idea what that did to me.â
âShow me what it did to you.â
He did, thoroughly and repeatedly, until you understood exactly how much heâd wanted you during all those professional exchanges.
The wedding happened a year later, simple and perfect in a garden overlooking Tokyo Bay. Satoru insisted on writing his own vows, and when the moment came, he pulled out a piece of paper that looked suspiciously like a flight plan.Â
He promised to pull down the stars for you if you ever wanted them, and you vowed to always be his voice guiding him home.
Years passed like this.
At some point, your story was known by everyone at the airport. Everyone was swooning over the perfect love story of two people who fell in love over their voices alone.
But the best parts were always the quiet moments. Morning coffee in your shared kitchen while he planned routes and you reviewed approach procedures. Afternoons when heâd surprise you at the tower with flowers and terrible jokes that made you ground and your colleagues laugh. Evenings curled up together planning the next adventure, his pilot charts spread across the coffee table next to approach manuals and takeout containers.
âWhere to next?â
âAnywhere you want,â was always his answer. âAs long as weâre flying together.â
And through it all, some things remained beautifully constantâthe flutter in your stomach when his call sign appeared on your screen, his voice calling from the sky, yours answering from the tower, and the way he still brought you something from every city.
âTower, this is Flight 447 requesting permission to kiss my beautiful wife once I land. And yes, I know this is a public frequency, and yesâI want everyone to hear it.â
âFlight 447, youâre the worst.â
His laugh crackled through the radio. âI love you,â he said, still completely, hopelessly in love.
And every time he landed, every time you watched his plane touch down safely on the runway, that same warmth bloomed in your chest, just like it had from the very first day. Because no matter how many flights he took, how many cities he visited, how many years passedâhe always came back to you.
After all, your voice had been the one calling him home from the very beginning.
The End
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author's note â wait ! before you go ! if you enjoyed this story, iâd be forever grateful if youâd consider gifting me a few minutes of your time to participate in a research survey for my masterâs thesis in psychology (if you haven't already) <3
here's the link.
itâs completely anonymous, but just a heads-up: the survey touches on nightmares and emotional wellbeing, so it may be sensitive for some. please feel free to stop at any point if it doesnât feel right for you.
thank you for flying with insufferable pilot gojo airlines ! please make sure your heart is in the upright position before disembarking. hope this brought you as much joy to read as it brought me to write hehe. somehow i love this idea so much of pilot gojo being completely smitten over a voice alone :')) <3
and sorry that this got unexpectedly horny at the end, my apologies lol. until next time, this is your author signing off. safe travels !

ps: if you want to get notifications for future updates, you can join my taglist here.
tags â @fayuki @starmapz @starlightanyaaa @sxnkuna @cocomanga Â
@nanamis-baker @rosso-seta @sugurbo @chiyokoemilia @janbannan Â
@bloopsstuff @snowsilver2000 @ihearttoru @momoewn @yokosandesu Â
@90s-belladonna @fairygardenprincesss @juneslove21 @glenkiller338 @gojossugarcandy Â
@wiserion @moucheslove @nanasukii28 @sugucultfollower @leuriss Â
@raendarkfaerie @yeiena @rainthensun @yvesdoee @amayaaaxx Â
@cristy-101 @bnbaochauuu @markliving @strawberryswtchblaxe @whytfisgojosohot Â
@bloodandnix @zanayaswrld @noble-17 @soapyaya @ethereal-moonlit Â
@beaniesayshi @etsuniiru @candyluvsboba @iglb12 @doobybopbop Â
@kamuihz @katsukiseyebrows @ezrazra @kalulakunundrum @torusbbg Â
Š lostfracturess. do not repost, translate, or copy my work.
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sum: sylus responds to an online ad for a roommate. you suddenly have this tall, well-spoken, handsome man living in the attic, playing classical music, tinkering with things he built, and humming off-key while he makes you pancakes in the morning before disappearing for weeks at a time. cw: modern au, roommate au, slice of life, slow burn, mild language, brief mentions of violence & torture, evols exists here, mutual pining, romantic tension, brief jealousy, alcohol, 3k wc track list: le carrousel - james quinn fig. 1 | fig. 2 | fig. 3 | fig. 4
The air reeks of mildew, dust, sweat, and disinfectant.Â
A lone lightbulb winks tawny overhead, casting ominous shadows along the concrete floor and walls, highlighting the savagery taking place within.
Four men occupy the room.Â
Sylus is the only one seated on a chair like a throne, legs crossedâthe paradigm of poised, twirling a folding knife between his fingers while a henchman stands in good form at his back.Â
The muffled screams have now dulled to wet whimpers. A grown man crying has never been a pretty sound. But Sylus has grown accustomed to it, sometimes dragging the fragmented remains of a man out himself.Â
Heâs a good foot from the show, watching with all the interest of someone used to brutality. Lowered lids cloak vacant eyes. He sighs for the umpteenth time, leaning back, clearly bored with this game.
Lackey number two rucks up slicked sleeves, swiping the sweat from his brow before getting back to work.Â
The victimâa self-proclaimed freelancer discharged from a rival faction, boasting about having antimatter weapons to sellâsnivels as Sylusâ henchman drags him across the floor. On his knees, ankles and wrists bound, breath shaky behind the bite of a makeshift gag, the man levels Sylus with a pleading look.Â
Itâs fruitless. The kingpin is in no mood for mercy. He waggles his fingers, signaling for his henchman to begin another round of mind-warping torture.Â
Blood and viscera arenât Sylusâ thing.Â
If he can help it, he prefers more neat, conventional methods for extracting information. Which is why he doesnât flinch when the goonâs cries rise again as if heâs being electrocuted.Â
The lightbulb glints once more, and a moth beating its wings as it orbits it, casts a foreboding shadow below.
Sylus toys with the knife again, mind slowly detaching itself, when his phone lightly buzzes in his coat.Â
He catches the bladeâs handle in his palm, fishes his cell from his inner pocket, and scrutinizes the screen. Arching a brow, his lips twitch, threatening to curl upward.Â
Itâs a message from you, your name accented with a lone heart emoji.Â
When he draws up the text, your voice invades his mind. He envisions you all frazzled, dramatic as ever, and his heart swells from the imagery.
(You): help me!
It reads half-cryptic. Heâs sitting up now, the knife returning to its home with a sharp shlink!
When he starts to feel an inkling of concern creeping in, thumb hovering over the keyboard, prepared to key in a response, another message comes through. Itâs a picture of a menu, sharp print against cardstock, the restaurant's name scrawled in cursive at the top.Â
(You): donât know how to read this. iâm hungry as hell and about to have a whole attitude. (You): heeeeellllp đ¨đ¨đ¨ (You): and donât say escargot. i will literally fight you.
This time, he does allow his lips to pull in that Cheshire Cat sort of way. Itâs endearing how you need him. How you rely on him to translate what you call ârich bastard speak.â Even if itâs for something minor, heâs grateful to be of use to you. You give him purpose in a world that bleeds grey. The shine of a lighthouse amid a tumultuous storm.Â
Heâs been there before, the eatery youâre fretting over. They have good liquor and decent grilled scallops. Heâs about to send back a personal rec, but then it strikes himâthe gleam of silver in the photoâs corner, half-hidden by the menu, but glaringly obvious.Â
An expensive watch wrapped around a wrist thatâs inherently masculine catches his eye. Bigger than yours, veins and sinew spilling from the links down to manicured nails.Â
Sylusâ jaw ticks.Â
He knows youâre on your lunch break. Has your schedule down to a science, pocketing it in case he has to do something irreversible to clear his tracks. Heâs aware that you primarily work with womenâyou sometimes vent about the things they do and donât, using him as a confidant whenever your day is too heavy to shoulder.Â
And maybe heâs done background checks on all of them, ensuring they wouldnât pose a problem later. To you and him.
But youâve never spoken of a man working in your small, hodgepodge department. A man too close for Sylusâ comfort. Casual familiarity that makes his eyes narrow.
Heâs already chased off one deranged ex. Heâd rather not come back to you missing while heâs in another city conducting business.
(Sylus): whos that sweetie? (You): ??? (Sylus): the tudor watch. (Sylus): in the corner. friend of yours? (You): oh! intern. heâs cool peeps. iâm like 6 years older than him and he keeps reminding me. đđđ
Sylus certainly does not release the quietest, most relieved breath. And the rigid set of his shoulders doesnât slacken upon discovering that youâre not secretly courting someone without his knowledge.
Itâs not stalking. Itâs ensuring his assets are secured.Â
(You): anyway, can you help me? you know i donât understand this fancy shit. (Sylus): avoid the rack of lamb. its a bit overseasoned. (You): lol (You): you forget who youâre talking to. i sprinkle seasonings on my food until my ancestors whisper, âenough, child.â
He chuckles something throaty, something endeared. And he doesnât realize heâs let his guard down until his henchman shifts behind him, clearing his throat. Sylus cuts his eyes over his shoulder, daring the man to utter a word. He doesnât, straightening his tie and returning his attention to the scene ahead.
(Sylus): it might be a bit overpowering even for you sweetie. (Sylus): go for the duck confit or the grilled halibut. those are more your tastes. (You): thank youuuuu! đđđ (Sylus): pair it with a glass of pinot gris. (You): gesundheit. (Sylus): and be sure to introduce me to your new intern friend before he whisks you out on a date next time. (You): đđđ (You): jealous?
Sylus doesnât do jealous. Itâs never been a word in his repertoire. Possessive, maybe. A little overprotective, sure. But jealousy suggests uncertaintyâbelly-baring surrender. Weaknessâand Sylus is everything but weak.
He keys in a response that he knows will have you tipping out of your chair.
(Sylus): jealousy would imply that youre not already mine sweetie.
He can virtually hear the cogs turning in your mind when you take a few beats to respond. The resulting surprised dog meme you send makes him stifle that rich manâs laugh behind his hand.Â
Youâre cute. Do you know that?
Leaving you with something to think about, he concludes your playful exchange.
(Sylus): have fun.
Peeling himself from the chair, he shoves his hands into his pockets, the arms of his coat dramatically fluttering behind him when he turns to exit the warehouse.Â
He pays no mind to the cries of agony behind him. Just clips over his shoulder to a stationary henchman by the entrance, âFinish up quickly.â
The sooner he cuts out the middlemen, the quicker the suppliers will start sniffing around themselves.
â
Itâs a little past 6 pm when the front doorâs lock jiggles.Â
Good. Perfect timing.
âYouâre home early,â you call from the fridge when that messy thatch of white appears in the doorway.Â
He stiffens, taking a little time to appraise you like he didnât expect you to be home. You snort, kicking the fridge door shut, a handful of grapes clutched in your hand.
You pop one into your mouth, leaning on the countertop. Syus approaches after toeing off his loafers and dropping his coat on the rack. The particles in the air seemingly bend and shift to accommodate him.Â
You try not to get hung up on what he said earlierâyou know, when he insisted you were his.
Maybe heâd been drinking himself. You had a little Pinot at his behest to combat your flaring nerves. To knock a little sense into yourself.
âWhy do you look like someone hacked Mephisto?â you jibe, trying to lighten the mood.Â
Sylusâ expression morphs into something easier. Something more like him as his lips pull into that familiar smirk. Without warning, he swipes a grape from your palm, and his eyes shine with a challenge as he deposits it in his mouth.Â
âWhy do you look like youâre up to no good?â he returns in that deep gravel, tone threaded with a tenderness youâve never heard expressed elsewhere.
Your jaw shifts. Heâs lucky heâs cute. The pinnacle of manliness. Handsome as all hell. Youâve never known someone to make something as simple as eating look hot.
Clearing your throat, you swipe some invisible dust off the counter after finishing off the last of your grapes. âNot up to anything bad. But since youâre home, you can watch a movie with me.â
The silence hangs for a moment. You glance up to see your roomie eyeing you with an intrigued brow. He reaches over the counter to flick your forehead. Heâs trying to scramble your brain matter, you just know it.
âDo I have a say in the matter, or are you just going to manipulate me with those dangerous eyes of yours?â
Your heart was already rabbiting in your chest. It works double time now, and your stomach drops to your feet. Youâre stricken with something cold. Something halfway pleasant.Â
Oh. Oh, he was flirting, wasnât he?
Opting for coy, you tug at some frayed threads at the end of your sweatshirt, caught between a laugh and a scoff.Â
âUnless youâve got some mysterious phone calls to take, youâre mine for the night. You owe me for babysitting Mephie. You know he secretly wants to murder me.â And for leaving me all by my lonesome again, you inwardly add.Â
If at all possible, his smirk deepens until a dimple craters his cheek. You have pins and needles in your legs. What the fuck even is breathing?
âDoubt that. Heâs programmed toâŚappreciate pretty things.â The way his eyes slide to you as pretty things leaps off his tongueâ
You typically keep the AC low for the summer. Pretty comfortable for you both. But it feels itâs reached boiling point in your quaint kitchen as your skin grows embarrassingly hot. Â
After a deep breath to get your head together, you move to the pantry to fish out some popcorn. Your movements are noticeably stiff as you tear through the plastic, not daring to turn around, lest he get a look at that crooked smile on your face.Â
âBatman it is,â you say, loud enough for him to hear above the beep of the microwave when you set the timer.
You feel him between your shoulder blades. Drilling down to the marrow with those brilliant, scarlet eyes before he huffs a laugh, tapping the counter. You peer over your shoulder as he pulls away, disappearing across the house, probably towards his room to change.
He comes back down while you powder the popcorn with seasonings. Heâs over your shoulder, static growing between your bodies. And you get a whiff of his worn cologne, of the clean cotton laundry detergent woven into the fibers of his shirt.
You move to the fridge, rifling through it to give your hands purpose. Something to occupy them, to keep them from shaking as you sort through your wine stash. Â
âWhat goes best with popcorn? Iâve got red, white, pinkâoh, something I bought âcause the label looked cute.â
Propped against the counterâs edge beside you, arms crossed over that unfairly solid chest, Sylus shakes his head. âHow about a glass of Michterâs 25? Bourbon pairs best with popcorn.â
âUh, sure?â
Youâre not entirely sure how the two mix. Probably something about the dolce colliding with the saltiness. Whatever. You like surprises. Your roomieâs always had pretty good taste.
He shoulders past you to reach for something at the top of the pantry. Amber gleams in an intricately designed bottle clutched in his hand. You give him a look, haughtily throwing some popcorn into your mouth.
âHas that been up there the whole time?â
You track him with your eyes as he draws two lowball whiskey glasses from the cupboard, then fetches some ice from the freezer. His expressionâs amused while he pours. He plucks the glasses from the counter, signaling you to follow him to the living room.Â
âI knew you wouldnât be able to find it, seeing that youâre the height of a gopher. Iâd say I found a pretty good hiding spot for it.â
He laughs that bewitching, throaty sound, effortlessly avoiding your foot aimed at his ankle to trip him up.Â
â
The TV swaddles you in its sporadic lighting as each scene unfolds.
You turned down all the lights, save for the one above the stove, to add to the ambience. The sounds of scuffling and explosions fill your living room, with occasional quips from your roomie about the exaggerated action and how unrealistic the mobsters are.Â
Thereâs familiarity in the way you sit on the couch. In how Sylus idly smooths his thumb over your ankle, propped in his lap, beneath a throw blanket. He put up with you shoving your cold feet under his thighs to pilfer his warmth until he tickled your feet and allowed you to use him as a footrest.Â
One of his arms is draped along the backrest, clutching his half-drunk glass. He paces himself. Youâre already on your third.
He turns to you with a twitch of a smile whenever he feels you staring at something other than the screen. Squeezes reassurance into your ankle before pretending like heâs consumed by the movie.Â
That Michter, whatever-the-hell it was called? Itâs smooth. Dangerous. It crept into your bloodstream when your guard was down, and your headâs a little fuzzy. Skin warm and tingly, inhibitions slowly sloughing off.
Youâre on your sixth round of Sylus-watching when the doorbell chimes. Both your gazes snap to its source.
âIâll get it,â says Sylus, tapping your foot for you to let him up, and setting his glass onto the coffee table with a soft clack.
You shake your head, feeling like youâre swimming through molasses, eyes all low, smile goofy. âNah. I got it.â
Itâs a feat. Almost losing a fight with the blanket, you make it to the door. Sylus snorts behind you. The delivery driver is kind as he hands you your pizza and receipt.
Somehow, you make it back to the living area. Youâre a mess of giggles and sluggish limbs as you fall back onto the sofa beside Sylus after dropping the pizza box onto the coffee table. So close, you could conquer the distance with an exhale.
His thighâs warm beside yours. Devastating. You contemplate grabbing it, letting your fingers test the rigidness of his quad under the pretense of being tipsy.
He closes the distance for you as if parsing through your nebulous thoughts.
Thereâs no preamble. No remarkable setup when his arm slips from the backrest to snake around your shoulders. Itâs a loose hang. Not tight, giving you room to wiggle free if youâre uncomfortable. You peer up into his face, and his eyes crease with something you mistake for affection beneath the glinting light of a chase scene.
The movieâs no longer interesting. It hasnât been for a while. Youâre warm inside, unsure if itâs a consequence of the alcohol or his proximity. Regardless, you toy with his fingers near your shoulder, smooth over his knuckles, testing the waters.
He makes no move to deter you, instead sinking deeper into the couch, legs spreading a little wider, hold on you a little more confident. He tugs you into his side without really thinking, fingers burning through the layers of skin on your arm.
Your hands drop to his ribcage to ground yourself through the slurry haze of inebriation and infatuation. His heart is steady in his chest, whereas yours bangs like a war call. Youâre close enough to bury your face into the hollow of his shoulder. That warm scent he carries is enough to soften your knees, your jaw.
Moving on autopilotâor maybe youâre fully aware of what youâre up toâyou pitch yourself closer. So close, youâre halfway across his lap, watching his Adamâs apple bob beneath the blue wash of light. Your eyes flit to those full lips, slightly parted, quivering. Those pretty lashes sweeping his cheeks, those scarlet eyes jumping like cinders in a hearth fire beneath.
Your head tilts up. He meets you halfway. Draws you closer, and you roost your hands on his chest as your lids droop. As his lips pan in.
But the union never comes.
He hesitates for a beat. Hovers, a breath left between your mouths. Shaky, ragged, hot. He drops his forehead to yours, his grip on your arm tight, and he forces out an anguished sigh.
âYouâve been drinking, sweetie,â he says, hoarse, barely restrained, almost like heâs reminding himself instead of you.
You giggle, trying to tamp down your nerves. The disappointment flaring like plasma ejections across the sunâs surface beneath your skin. âSo have you.â
He huffs through his nose, lips pulling into a tired smile. âYes. But Iâm also better at holding my liquor.â
âSays who?â
His gaze consumes you. Like liquid spilled over smoldering coals. He gathers your cheek into his palm, so tender as he thumbs over your chin, your bottom lip. He watches it when he tugs down, how it snaps back into place, how full it is, and you can sense the edges of his resolve fraying like a rock face worn down by the surf.
âYouâre warm. You can barely keep your eyes open.â His voice drags pleasantly along with his fingers along the skirt of your jaw. âYou can hardly sit upright, sweetheart. If I do this now, I wonât be able to stop.â
Quivering fingers close around his wrist. You adjust on the couch until your knees meet the side of his thigh, nuzzling your molten cheek into his palm, head reeling. âWho says you have to?â you counter, voice crackling. Pleading.
He presses your foreheads together again. Your eyes slip shut as he slides his fingers into the space between yours, guiding your hand to his mouth instead for a kiss. Heâs warring with himself. Berating himself for even letting things get this far.
He draws back slothfully, like it stings, like heâs leaving a bit of himself with you. And maybe he is, his defenses halfway buried beneath the floor. The moment hangs between you, stretched like the fragile spindles of a spiderâs web. He doesnât want to break the spell. You donât want him to, either.
âNot yet,â he rasps, settling against the cushions once more and drawing you back into his side. âNot like this. Youâll thank me in the morning, sweetheart.â
Somehow, you have a hard time believing that, a wobbly pout taking hold of your lips.
It annoys you to no end.
Sylus is a man who doesnât take what he isnât given freely. Coherently. Heâs such a fucking gentleman, you want to punch him sometimes. This emotional warfare is maddening.
Still, you curl into his side, burying your face into the nook of his neck to chase that heady scent. His pulse quickens, a sharp intake of breath when your lips graze his carotid, before he rests his chin on the crown of your head. He smooths over the goosebumps flaring over your arm as the credits roll, offering a quiet apology.
Another almost. Another could-have-been. Another bout of shitty timing.
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ć ⎠rafayel found that spot .á
it was accidental.
really was.
but, for some reason he just can't stop hitting that spot now.
"ngh! ra-rafaâyel!" your yelps came out as squeals, so did the sound of your sodden pussy as it gushes liquids after liquids.
"fuuuck, you squeezeâoh shit," his grip on your love handles tighten, just like the way your core does to his pistoning cock. "so tight! you like when i hit this? huh?" cockiness drips from his voice despite the small crease on his eyebrows, sweat shining between.
he repeats the same hip movements again and again, seemingly hitting your sweet spot and opening your womb at the same time. "s'too much!" you sob, hands gripping his hair and leaving nail marks on his hard back.
"gonna cum in this ovulating cunt, cutie." leaning down to whisper filth on your ear, he bites down on the lobe before licking it to soothe the sting. "you're so goddamn cute."
with your back arching, he was able to easily circle an arm around your waist as the other hand presses down on where he's hitting that secret spot.
oh.
oh.
"c-cumming!"
it seems that certain button pushed you over the edge as your body shakes relentlessly, shivering as your vagina releases milky cum paired with a small trickle of squirt. "yeah, holy shit look at that..." backing up a little to the view, rafayel whistles. his cock half inside you, shines with your release.
"don't... look, s'embarrassing." you shield your eyes away from his gaze and try to close your legs but his strong hold stops you. "cutie, i haven't given you mine yet."
without any remorse for your sensitive cunny, rafayel slams himself back with easeâpinning your body down with his. "'ayel! no more~!"
ragged breath, heavy panting, loud groans, and blissful moans fill the sex clad room as he chase that mind blowing orgasm. "gonna cum, gonna cum, gonna cum in you baby!"
with a particularly sloppy smack of his hips, the tip of his dick twitch as he touches your gspot before releasing his load, accidentally triggering another release from your hole.
"rafâ!"
... and then everything was black for you.
all rights reserved, rafasbride 2025
á˛ď¸ľđź % dividers from @/cafekitsune ! !
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a treatise on inconvenient attraction
pairing â undercover prince satoru x servant reader
synopsis : satoru is many things: a crown prince in disguise, a so-called eunuch draped in silk and secrets, and entirely too clever for his own good. but when you appear in the middle of palace chaosâcalm, competent, and wholly unimpressedâsatoru finds himself watching a little too closely. you cure what the court physicians couldnât, ask the wrong questions with the right kind of precision, and somehow manage to look like you belong everywhere and nowhere at once. he tells himself itâs curiosity. itâs duty. itâs absolutely not personal.
but then again, inconvenient things rarely are.
tags â oneshot divided into two parts, apothecary diaries au, fluff, humor, slow burn, sexual tension, secret identities, enemies to lovers, royal court politics, witty banter, mutual pining, medical drama, imperial intrigue, disguised royalty, forbidden affection, reader is so done, satoru is so annoying, suguru is tired, palace hijinks, touch-starved idiots, eventual smut, masturbation, possibly inaccurate court etiquette & other cultural inaccuracies, i tried my best please be kind ^^
wc â 29k | gen. masterlist | part two | read on ao3?
a/n: yes this was meant to be a oneshot but tumblr said no to my 46k draft so i split it into two parts. part two will be up tonight or tomorrow!! i also added A LOT while editing because i have no self-control. huge thanks to power thesaurus for enabling the vocabulary overdose. sorry for the long wait and i hope you enjoy <3
a calamity of cosmic proportions had just befallen the inner courtâor so the wrenching sobs reverberating through the silk-draped pavilion would have you believe.
a hairpin, delicate as a poetâs ego, had snapped clean in two, its jade heart fractured like the dreams of a dynasty on the wane. the air thrummed with tragedy, thick with the scent of jasmine oil and the faint, acrid tang of ink from a nearby scholarâs overturned pot, as if the universe itself had taken offense at the ornamentâs demise.
at the pavilionâs heart, satoru held court like the star of an imperial opera, his presence a spectacle of calculated excess.
âit is truly a heartbreak of craftsmanship,â he intoned, cradling the broken shard as if it were a soldier felled in a war only he had the imagination to mourn. the jade caught the morning light, refracting it into mournful glints that danced across the lacquered floor. âthis was no mere ornament, my lady. thisâthis was a poem carved in bone and stone, an elegy to elegance itself.â
the concubine, lady mei, sniffled with the fervor of a stage heroine, her silk sleeves fluttering like moth wings as she dabbed her eyes with a gold-threaded handkerchief. each sob was a performance, perfectly pitched, as if sheâd rehearsed it in front of a mirror. her powdered cheeks glistened with artfully placed tears.
satoru sighed, the sound heartfelt and entirely performative, a maestro playing to an audience of one. he tilted his head just so, pale hair spilling over his shoulder like moonlight cascading over porcelain, catching the light with a shimmer that felt choreographed.
a breeze curled through the open lattice, lifting the hem of his embroidered robes with such enviable timing it seemed less natureâs doing and more the work of a bribed servant. with satoru, both were plausible.
behind him loomed suguru, a study in austere black, hands clasped behind his back with the rigidity of a man bracing for chaos. his expression was carved from stone, all sharp angles and weary resignation, as if heâd been sculpted to endure satoruâs theatrics for eternity. his hair, tied with habitual neatness, let a few rogue strands graze his cheek.
his gaze skimmed the scene, heavy with the exhaustion of a man whoâd watched this exact farce, with only slight variations in props, more times than the palace cats had stolen fish from the kitchens.
âperhaps,â satoru declared, raising the jade fragment aloft as if offering it to the heavens for judgment, âwe must mourn it properly. a vigil, steeped in moonlight? a commemorative tea ceremony, with cups etched in sorrow?â
âa funeral pyre,â suguru muttered, voice dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs. âiâll fetch the kindling. maybe some incense to mask the absurdity.â
satoru ignored him with the serene grace of a man whoâd long since perfected the art of selective hearing, his eyes never leaving lady meiâs trembling form.
âfear not, my lady,â he vowed, dropping to one knee with the flourish of a knight swearing fealty. he clasped her hands, his fingers cool and deliberate, adorned with a single ring that glinted like a conspiratorâs promise. âi shall find a replacementâmore exquisite, more divine, more⌠unbreakable. yes, even if i must scour every silk merchant, every jade carver, every whispering bazaar between here and the red cliffs.â
he let the silence stretch, heavy with portent. lady mei gasped, her breath catching like a plucked zither string. a single tear traced her cheek, glistening like dew on a lotus petal.
mission accomplished. satoruâs lips twitched, the faintest ghost of a smirk, gone before anyone but the narrator could catch it.
behind them, suguru pinched the bridge of his nose with the slow, methodical frustration of a man who knew it would do nothing but give his fingers something to do. his sigh was a silent prayer to deities whoâd clearly abandoned him long ago.
when the theatrics finally subsidedâlady mei comforted, her handkerchief sodden, the jade fragments swaddled in silk like relicsâsatoru glided from the pavilion with the poise of a swan who knew exactly how devastatingly beautiful he looked. he trailed perfume, a heady blend of sandalwood and smug self-satisfaction, curling behind him like incense smoke.
suguru followed, a silent shadow with a scowl etched so deeply it mightâve been carved by a jade artisan.
once they slipped beneath a carved archway into a quieter corridor, the performance peeled away like silk robes sliding over lacquered floors. satoruâs spine straightened, the exaggerated flourishes vanished, and he walked with the easy, unyielding grace of a man born to command palaces.
the air here was cooler, scented with wisteria and the faint, medicinal bite of herbs drying in a distant courtyard.
âwhat?â satoru asked, eyes gleaming with faux innocence as he adjusted the sapphire-studded sash at his waist. âi was being helpful.â
âyou were being ridiculous,â suguru replied, his voice flat as the surface of a frozen lake.
âridiculously helpful,â satoru corrected, flashing a grin that could outshine the emperorâs polished jade throne. he flicked open his fan with a snap, waved it twice, then forgot it entirely.
suguru shot him a sidelong glance, more sigh than stare, the kind of look that carried the weight of a thousand unspoken retorts.
now that the mask had fallen, subtle details sharpened: the glint of satoruâs ceremonial earrings, forged from gold so pure they whispered of plundered kingdoms; the way his sleeves brushed the corridorâs tiles with deliberate drag; his hair, nearly waist-length, swaying like a silk banner, catching latticed sunlight in a cascade of silver.
âa hairpin emergency,â suguru deadpanned. âyou skipped a logistics meetingâwhere we were discussing grain shortagesâfor a hairpin emergency.â
âit was tragic. deeply symbolic. that hairpin was the fragility of desire itself, suguru,â satoru said, his tone lofty, gesturing with the fan. âa metaphor for the fleeting nature of beauty, shattered in an instant.â
suguru glanced skyward, seeking divine intervention from heavens that had long since stopped answering.
the corridor stretched before them, vermilion pillars rising in regal procession, their surfaces carved with dragons that seemed to smirk at the absurdity below. sunlight filtered through the screens, painting latticed shadows that danced over the tiles.
âand your grand plan to unravel the true nature of court politics,â suguru said, each word measured, âinvolves⌠hosting interpretive grief sessions for concubines over broken accessories?â
âthe best disguises become second nature,â satoru replies, his wink a fleeting spark in the afternoon light, the sapphire stud in his earlobe catching a glint as he tilts his head. âbesides, would you rather i act like a stuffy prince?â
the irony isnât lost on himâhe is a stuffy prince, or will be someday, when his father, whose breath rattles like dry leaves in his chest, finally yields the crown still heavy with the ghost of tragedy.
the late empressâs assassination, when satoru was barely old enough to stumble through palace corridors, had carved a brutal lesson into the imperial family: visibility invites blades. better to cloak the heir in silk and paint him with harmless whimsy than risk another dagger finding its mark.
only five souls in the sprawling palace know the truth: his father, whose sunken eyes track satoru with fading sharpness; the imperial chancellor, whose pinched lips birthed this charade; the minister of justice, whose tribunal and ledgers guard the successionâs fragile legality; suguru, whose shadow clings to satoru with the weight of unspoken oaths; and satoru himself, whose laughter sometimes blurs the line between performance and truth.
the inner court, bereft of an empress dowager, pulses with the consortsâ ruthless ambition, their silk robes whispering of power sharper than any sword. though the emperor weakens daily, these women wage silent wars for his favor, each dreaming of a son to crown her empress should the hidden prince perish.
they know such a prince exists, veiled for safety, but none suspect he flits among them, orchestrating their rivalries with a peacockâs strut and a courtesanâs smile.
the ladies adore their ornamental peacockâhis flair for theatrics, his mastery of rouge and kohl, his gossip that slices like a hairpinâs edge. they sigh theatrically in his presence, their voices dripping with the practiced melancholy of lives honed by ambition and cushioned by luxury.
âwhat a waste,â the third imperial consort murmurs behind her fan, its ivory slats trembling faintly as her jade-green eyes trace the elegant curve of satoruâs throat, where a single pearl pendant rests against pale skin. âif only heaven had been more generous with your... wholeness.â
satoruâs smile blooms, honed over yearsâa charm that invites secrets, a distance that keeps them safe. his fingers, glittering with rings that snare the light pouring through latticed screens, adjust a fold in his azure robe, the silk whispering like a conspirator. âperhaps heaven knew iâd be too dangerous otherwise, my lady. imagine the chaos if i possessed both beauty and... capability.â
the women titter, their fans fluttering like startled sparrows, their laughter a delicate chime of scandalized delight. he navigates their tempests with a diplomatâs grace, though the irony of wielding statecraft to soothe cosmetic squabbles stings faintly.
lady xiao, her skin glowing like moonlight on snow from some costly powder, leans forward, her gold hairpin swaying as she adopts a conspiratorial whisper. âyou simply must settle our debate, master satoru. lady chen insists crushed pearls in face powder yield the most ethereal glow, but i maintain powdered moonstone is far superior.â
âboth have their merits,â satoru replies, his tone grave as a scholarâs, though his eyes flicker with amusement only suguru, leaning against a pillar, would catch. he lifts a strand of lady chenâs hair, its ebony sheen catching the light as he studies it with exaggerated focus, his silver bracelet glinting.
âwith your warm undertones, crushed pearls would complement beautifully.â he turns to lady xiao, close enough that her breath hitches, her kohl-lined eyes wide. âbut for your cooler complexion, moonstone would weave that otherworldly glow you chase.â
the verdict sparks preeningâlady chenâs fingers smooth her hair, lady xiaoâs fan snaps shut with a triumphant click. satoru sinks back into his cushioned seat, silk rustling like a secret unveiled, accepting their praise with the ease of a man crowned in their vanities.
âthough,â he adds, mischief curling his lips as his lashes cast delicate shadows, âtrue radiance comes from within. perhaps you should consult the palace physicians about inner harmony before fussing over external charms.â
the suggestion, cloaked in earnestness, lands like a jest. laughter erupts, bright and sharp, the women reveling in his knack for dressing insults as wisdom, their painted nails gleaming as they clutch fans tighter.
suguru watches from the gardenâs edge, his black robes stark against the pavilionâs vermilion pillars, his face a mask of weary endurance. a stray breeze tugs a dark strand loose from his neat bun, brushing his cheek as his eyes track satoruâs performance with the resignation of a man tethered to chaos.
âmaster satoru,â lady qiao ventures, her voice honeyed, her lips glistening with rose-tinted gloss as she tilts her head, a jade comb glinting in her upswept hair. âsurely you have preferences regarding feminine beauty? purely from an aesthetic standpoint, of course.â
the question is a silk-wrapped trap. satoruâs smile holds, but his eyes sharpen, a flash of the mind destined for thornier battles. his fingers, tracing the carved armrest, pause briefly, the gold ring on his thumb catching a stray sunbeam.
âbeauty,â he muses, âis like fine poetry. exquisite verses reveal new depths with each reading. surface prettiness fades, but intelligence, wit, character...â his gaze sweeps their faces, lingering just long enough to flatter, âthose transform mere charm into transcendence.â
the answer sates their hunger for praise while baring nothing, a masterstroke they mistake for depth. their fans resume their dance, silk rustling like whispers of approval.
hours might pass thusâsatoru weaving through cosmetic crises with finesseâbut today, peace shatters like porcelain on marble.
the trouble begins with a silk scarf.
lady yun sweeps into the pavilion, azure silk draped to accent her porcelain skin, the emperorâs favored hue shimmering with intent. her hairpin, a silver crane, gleams as she moves, her eyes cool with triumph. lady mei, in pale lavender, stiffens, her fan halting mid-flutter, her lips tightening beneath their coral stain.
âhow... bold,â lady xiang purrs, her smile sharp as frost, her fingers tightening around a jade bangle that clinks faintly. âto wear his majestyâs signature color so prominently. one might think youâre presuming your position.â
satoruâs fingers pause on his teacup, its porcelain cool against his palm, sensing the venom brewing. suguru edges closer, his hand brushing the hilt of a hidden blade, his jaw set.
âpresumptions?â lady yunâs laugh chimes, her sleeve rippling as she gestures, revealing a bracelet of sapphire beads. âi wear what his majesty gifted me. perhaps if you spent less time whispering with servants and more earning his favor, youâd grasp the difference.â
the barb cuts deep. lady xiangâs face flushes beneath her powder, her eyes flashing like struck flint. satoru counts three seconds before chaos erupts.
âladies,â he interjects, rising with a honeyed command, his robe catching the light in a cascade of azure folds, his silver hairpin glinting. âsurely we can resolve this withoutââ
âstay out of this, master satoru,â lady xiang snaps, her voice cracking, her fan trembling in her grip. the dismissal bites, though satoru cloaks his flinch in feigned concern.
lady yun pounces, her nails tracing her sleeve with studied nonchalance. âhow refreshing to see your true colors,â she says, her voice silk over steel. âhis majesty noted your... common mannerisms lately. perhaps the strain of clinging to relevance frays your breeding.â
lady xiangâs palm meets lady yunâs cheek with a crack that silences the pavilion, her bangle clinking sharply. gasps ripple through the consorts, their fans freezing mid-air, eyes wide with shock. lady yunâs cheek blooms red, her crane hairpin trembling as she touches the mark with delicate fingers, her gaze hardening into something lethal.
âyou dare strike me?â she whispers, her voice low, her sapphire beads catching the light like tears. âa daughter of the northern provinces, educated in the capital, marked by heaven with this beauty?â
âbeauty fades,â lady xiang hisses, advancing, her lavender silk swaying like a predatorâs tail, her hairpin glinting. âbut vulgarity is eternal. his majesty will tire of your pretensions soon enough.â
âhis majesty,â lady yun counters, her smile venomous, her fan snapping open with a flick, âhas tired of your seduction attempts. why else cancel tonightâs private audience? other matters, he said, demand his attention.â
the blow lands. lady xiang falters, her breath catching, her coral lips parting as the truth sinks inâher meticulously planned evening with the emperor, her chance to secure favor, stolen. her bangle clinks again as her hand trembles.
âyou scheming witch,â she breathes, lunging with murder in her eyes, her hairpin slipping slightly in her hair.
satoru moves, swift and fluid, his robe whispering as he steps between them, his fan snapping shut with a crack. âmy dear ladies,â he says, voice laced with subtle command, âsurely such passion belongs in more... productive pursuits?â
his tone halts them, though their glares burn like embers. satoruâs mind races, cataloging lady yunâs intelligence network, lady xiangâs desperation, the shifting sands of favor. his pearl pendant sways as he tilts his head, feigning concern.
âperhaps,â he ventures, his voice smooth as jade, âlady xiang, you wished to discuss that complexion treatment? and lady yun, your poetry recitation tomorrow deserves preparation.â
the suggestion, edged with condescension, reins them in. lady yun smooths her silk, her sapphire beads clinking faintly, her rage cooling into a mask of poise. lady xiangâs smile sharpens, but she nods, her hairpin now askew, betraying her frayed composure.
satoru claps, the sound sharp, his rings flashing. âhow marvelous! such spirited discourse invigorates the afternoon. shall we revisit pearl powder versus moonstone? we were on the cusp of brilliance.â
the redirect forces civility, though tension crackles. satoru sinks into his cushions, his silk settling like a sigh, his mind dissecting the consortsâ movesâlady yunâs spies, lady xiangâs fragility, the courtâs delicate balance.
as evening shadows stretch across the marble, satoru rises, his movements liquid, his hairpin catching the fading light. âduty calls, my ladies. the third consort awaits my counsel for her evening attire.â
their disappointment flickers, but they turn to tomorrowâs schemes. satoru bows, precise yet playful, his robe trailing like a cometâs tail. suguru falls into step as they leave, silent until the pavilionâs whispers fade.
âexhausting performance, your highness,â suguru murmurs, his dark sleeve brushing a pillar, his bun loosening slightly.
âgetting easier,â satoru replies, shedding his theatrics, his posture sharpening, his fan tucked into his sash. âthough my future subjects will despair when their emperor knows more about catfights than regiments.â
âyour father would say palace politics and battlefields demand the same cunning,â suguru notes, his voice dry, a faint crease at his brow.
satoruâs laugh carries mirth and shadow, his earrings glinting as he strides forward. tomorrow brings more cosmetic crises, more veiled barbs, more lessons in power disguised as powder disputes. the crown prince will hide behind silk and sighs, studying his subjectsâ souls one shallow secret at a time.
after all, the best disguises become second nature. and sometimes, the sharpest power lies in pretending you hold none at all.
the palace hummed with a frenetic buzzânot the charming, festival-lanterns-and-rice-wine kind, where moonlight glints off sake cups and laughter spills like cherry blossoms, but the swarming, fretful, everyone's-talking-and-no-one's-hearing kind that screamed someone important was either sick, scandalized, or both.
lucky for the court, it was a two-for-one special: the emperor's favored concubine, lady hua, had taken ill, and the whispers swirling through the vermilion halls were ripe with intrigue sharp enough to cut silk.
it began with fainting spells, delicate as a willow branch snapping under snow. then came the headaches, each one described with the reverence of a poet lamenting lost love.
by the time rumors slithered to satoru's ears, the court physicians had added skin lesions to the listâdelicate ones, naturally, because heaven forbid a woman of the inner court suffer anything less than poetic. âfemale hysteria,â the physicians declared with the smugness of men who'd never questioned their own brilliance, waving it off as a trifle. âprobably just summer heat affecting her delicate temperament.â
maybe it was. maybe it wasn't. but satoru was boredâa state as dangerous as a spark in a lacquered pavilion when paired with his curiosity and the kind of power that hid beneath shimmering silk like a blade in a jeweled sheath.
he sprawled across a divan like a cat claiming its throne, pale hair spilling over the brocade cushion in a cascade that caught the lantern light like spun silver. âi want to see her,â he drawled, voice lazy yet laced with a spark of intent, like a cat batting at a moth it fully intended to devour.
suguru didnât lift his eyes from the scroll he feigned reading, arms crossed over dark robes that seemed to absorb the light, their folds creasing like a storm cloud on the verge of breaking. his hair, bound with a cord of black silk, gleamed faintly in the slanted glow, as if even it resented being tethered to satoruâs orbit. âthe emperor hasnât summoned you,â he said, voice flat, though the faintest twitch of his brow betrayed a patience fraying like a worn thread.
âthatâs the charm of playing eunuch,â satoru replied, rising with the fluid grace of a dancer who knew every gaze followed him. his robesâsilver threaded with sapphire embroidery, ostentatiously tastefulâshimmered like moonlight rippling across a still pond, the hem whispering against the polished floor like a loverâs sigh. âevery door yields if you smile just so and dazzle them with a touch of charm.â
suguru exhaled through his nose, a sound heavy with a thousand unspoken curses, each one honed by years of trailing satoruâs chaos. âyour highness, court gossip is beneath your station.â
ânothingâs beneath my station when iâm cloaked as a eunuch,â satoru chirped, swiping a sesame-crusted rice cake from a lacquered tray as he sauntered toward the door. he popped it into his mouth, the seeds crunching faintly, and shot suguru a grin that was equal parts mischief and menace, as if daring the world to challenge him. âitâs half the thrill. havenât i earned a bit of fun after wrangling the inner courtâs tantrums?â
and with that, he was gone, robes flaring behind him like a cometâs tail, leaving a trail of sandalwood perfume and the promise of impending upheaval. suguru muttered a curseâsomething about peacocks strutting toward their inevitable fallâand followed, because someone had to tether the fool before he plunged headlong into ruin.
what they found at lady hua's quarters was chaos distilled into a single, suffocating room. maids scurried like ants fleeing a crushed nest, their silk slippers whispering frantically against the floor.
court physicians argued in hushed but venomous tones, their elaborate sleeves flapping like indignant birds, silk badges of rank glinting on their chests as they gestured wildly at treatment scrolls. someoneâlikely a junior attendantâsobbed into a brass basin, the sound muffled but piercing. the air reeked of bitter medicinal herbs, sharp and acrid, tangled with the cloying sweetness of sandalwood incense and the sour undercurrent of barely-contained hysteria.
a breeze from an open screen carried the faint tang of lotus blossoms from the courtyard, but it did little to ease the oppressive weight of the room.
satoru leaned against the doorframe, one hand languidly fanning himself with a jade-inlaid fan, its painted silk fluttering like a butterfly's wing. the other hand rested lightly on the fan's hilt, fingers tracing the carved dragon as if it might whisper secrets.
he looked like a man at the theater, idly amused by a tragedy he had no stake inâand to be fair, he was. his eyes, sharp as a hawk's beneath their lazy half-lids, scanned the room with the casual precision of someone who missed nothing.
then his gaze snagged on somethingâor rather, someone.
you.
in the heart of the maelstrom, you knelt in the corner like a shadow given form. not beside lady huaâthat privilege belonged to the proper court physicians with their silk badges and centuries of inherited authorityâbut close enough to see, to listen, to absorb every frustrated gesture and dismissive wave of their sleeves.
you weren't dressed like anyone of importance. your outer court servant robes were simple, practical cotton dyed the color of weathered stone, sleeves rolled past your elbows in a way that would scandalize the inner court but served you well in the servants' quarters where actual work got done. your hair was pinned back with a plain wooden stick, not jade or silver, and your hands bore the telltale stains of someone who ground herbs by moonlight when the day's official duties were done.
but oh, how you watched. your eyes tracked every movement of the physicians' hands, cataloged each herb they selected, noted the precise angle of lady hua's breathing.
when one physician mixed powdered deer antler with ginseng, your jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. when another declared her pulse âflighty as a sparrow,â your fingers twitched against your thighâonce, twice, three times, as if counting beats they couldn't feel from across the room.
satoru straightened, the motion so slight it mightâve escaped anyone but suguru, who stood at his side like a storm cloud tethered to a comet. his fan slowed, silk shivering in the pause, as if the air itself held its breath. âwhoâs that?â he murmured, voice low, curling like incense smoke as he tilted his head, pale hair slipping over his shoulder like a cascade of moonlight.
suguru had already marked you, his arms crossed tighter over his chest, the dark fabric of his robes creasing under the strain. âouter court servant. kitchen work, mostly. cleans the medicine rooms.â each word clipped, as if to dismiss you before satoruâs curiosity took root.
âhmm,â satoru hummed, but his eyes never left you, sharp and gleaming with the delight of a puzzle half-solved. âand yet sheâs not scrubbing pots.â
you shifted, angling your body to better observe the lead physicianâs fumbling needlework, seeking a pressure point to ease lady huaâs pain. the movement was subtle, practicedâa dancerâs adjustment, born of months spent watching, learning, memorizing from the shadows. your lips moved again, silent but deliberate, and satoru caught the glint of something fierce in your expression, like a blade catching lamplight.
this wasnât idle curiosity. this was hunger, raw and disciplined, the kind that drove scholars to madness or mastery.
the physician botched his needle placement, and you winced, fingers curling into fists, your silent corrections now a faint whisper of frustration. satoru watched, enthralled, as your hands mimicked the motionsâprecise, fluid, as if you could thread the needle through her meridians from across the room.
âshe knows,â he whispered, more to himself than suguru, his voice alight with discovery.
âknows what?â suguru asked, though his tone suggested heâd already glimpsed the answer and dreaded its consequences.
âthat theyâre doing it wrong.â satoruâs smile was slow, delighted, like a child uncovering a forbidden game. âlook at her hands.â
your fingers danced against your thigh, tracing the exact patterns of needle insertion, herb grinding, pulse-takingâmuscle memory honed through countless unseen hours, knowledge that shouldnât belong to a servant who spent her days scouring medicine bowls. each movement was a silent rebuke to the physiciansâ arrogance, a testament to a mind that refused to be confined by her station.
one physician stepped back, wiping sweat from his brow with a silk handkerchief, his voice heavy with pompous resignation. âthe ladyâs condition defies our current wisdom,â he declared, more concerned with preserving his dignity than her life. âweâve exhausted all known remedies.â
thatâs when you moved.
not with boldnessâthat wouldâve been suicide. instead, you rose from your corner with the fluid grace of a crane taking flight, approached the lead physician with eyes appropriately downcast, and spoke in the deferential tones expected of your rank.
âhonored physician,â you said, voice clear yet soft, cutting through the roomâs chaos like a bell in a storm, âthis humble servant has seen similar symptoms in the outer courts. if it would not offend your wisdom⌠a kitchen maid last month suffered likewise.â
the physician barely spared you a glance, already dismissing whatever peasant cure you might dare suggest. âfemale hysteria is commonplace. hardly comparable to lady huaâs refined constitution.â
âof course, honored sir,â you murmured, eyes still lowered, but satoru caught the steel beneath your silk-smooth tone. âyet the maidâs symptoms mirrored theseâthe headaches, the pallor, the precise pattern of lesions. she recovered fully after a decoction of chrysanthemum, mint, and processed rehmannia root.â
his attention snagged, though he masked it with scholarly disdain. âabsurd. such simple herbs could never address a condition of this intricacy.â
you held your ground, voice humble yet unyielding, like bamboo bending in a gale. âyour expertise far surpasses my crude observations, naturally. but the maid did recover, and her symptoms aligned so preciselyâŚâ you trailed off, the perfect portrait of respectful hesitation, your fingers twitching as if itching to demonstrate.
the physicianâs pride warred with his desperation. lady huaâs breathing grew shallower, her skin taking on a waxen pallor that would soon spell ruin for everyone in the room. âthese herbs,â he said at last, feigning casual curiosity, âyou saw their preparation?â
âthis servant cleans the preparation rooms,â you replied, a careful lie wrapped in just enough truth to pass muster. âsometimes the physicianâs assistants share their methods while i work.â
satoru watched the performance with rapt fascination, his fan now still, its silk frozen mid-flutter. you werenât merely suggesting a cureâyou were orchestrating the entire scene, playing the physicianâs ego like a kotoâs strings, submissive enough to avoid offense, knowledgeable enough to be indispensable, desperate enough to seem harmless.
yet your eyes, when they flicked upward for the briefest moment, held secrets sharp enough to cut glass, a mind that danced circles around the men who dismissed you.
within the hour, lady hua sat upright, color blooming in her cheeks like dawn over a lotus pond, the mysterious lesions fading like mist under morning sun. the lead physician accepted congratulations with magnanimous grace, claiming credit for âconsulting palace staff to compile comprehensive symptom reports,â his chest puffing like a rooster at dawn.
you had already melted back into the shadows, your work done, but not before satoru caught the satisfied curve of your lipsâfleeting, triumphant, gone in a breath.
âfascinating,â he murmured, eyes lingering on the corner where youâd vanished, as if the air still held traces of your presence.
suguruâs expression remained a study in neutrality, though the tension in his jaw betrayed his resignation. âa lucky coincidence. simple remedies sometimes outshine complex ones.â
âhmm.â satoruâs smile lingered, bright and sharp as a freshly drawn blade. âtell me, suguruâwhat do we know of kitchen maids who memorize advanced medical techniques? who position themselves flawlessly to study court physicians? who move like theyâre accustomed to being heeded, not ignored?â
âwe know,â suguru said dryly, his voice heavy with the weight of impending trouble, âthat youâre about to make this our headache.â
ânot our headache,â satoru corrected with a grin. âmy amusement.â
because lady huaâs recovery mightâve dazzled the court, but youâyou were a riddle cloaked in servantâs robes, wielding knowledge that could heal or harm, navigating the palace with the lethal precision of someone who knew their own danger.
and satoru gojo, crown prince masquerading as eunuch, had just stumbled upon a game far more captivating than court whispers, one he intended to play to its end.
the emperorâs study always smelled faintly of old powerâthat particular blend of sun-warmed parchment, cedar polish, and something faintly metallic. blood, maybe, or the memory of it. it was the kind of room where even the air seemed to walk softly.
satoru sat across from the emperor with the calm of a man desperately trying not to tap his fingers. he adjusted the fold of his sleeve, eyes flicking toward the desk where his fatherâs brush moved in careful strokes. his posture was perfect, intentionally soâchin tilted, one knee loosely crossed, silver hair tied back but predictably disobedient with a few strands curling just beside his cheek. his robe, navy lined in restrained gold, sat sharp against the sun streaming through the lattice window. he looked every inch the noble son. all very deliberate.
âfather,â he began, and the word felt heavier than it should have. maybe because he hadnât used it in a while. maybe because he still wasnât sure which version of the emperor he was talking to today.
no reply. the brush continued its whispered dance across parchmentâa list of names, most likely. or death warrants. same difference in the imperial court.
âiâve been thinking about the medical needs of the inner court.â
still no reaction, just the soft scrape of ink and paper. satoru swallowed the urge to fill the silence with more words and waited instead, watching for the telltale signs of his fatherâs attention.
thenâa twitch of a brow. not much, but it meant he was listening. unfortunately.
âthe women,â satoru continued, his voice smooth but softer now. âtheyâre suffering. quietly, of course. as they always do. theyâre afraid to speak about their ailments, or worse, theyâve learned not to bother trying.â
the emperorâs brush paused for just a heartbeat before continuing its careful work.
âbecause they canât be examined properly by male physicians, their symptoms are dismissed. attributed to nerves, to wombs, to feminine hysteria.â satoru kept his tone clinical, professional. âreal suffering gets reduced to mood swings.â
âand youâve discovered this how?â
the trap was expected, so satoru smiledâjust a little, mostly to himself. âthe third consort mentioned it during a conversation about hair ornaments. she gets migraines, told me she stopped letting the court physicians treat her after one tried to give her a mercury concoction and advised her to avoid loud colors.â
he left out the part where heâd actually laughed at the absurdity. sheâd joined him. misery loves company, after all.
âshe said a servant helped her instead. a woman from the outer court.â satoru watched his fatherâs face carefully. âi saw her treat the consort myself. her technique was impressiveâprecise, not palace-trained, but more effective because of it.â
what he didnât say: you hadnât spared him a glance during the treatment. your fingers had moved with unbothered certainty, tucking the consortâs hair behind her ear while applying pressure to specific points with your other hand. your eyes had flicked toward him only once, and the look had been unimpressed, functional, dismissive.
it had lit something unfortunate in him.
âyou seem very well-informed about this woman.â
satoru inclined his head, letting one finger trail along the edge of the lacquered desk. âi asked around. standard diligenceâyou know how thorough i can be when something catches my interest.â
âi do,â his father murmured, finally setting the brush down with deliberate care.
satoru let the moment stretch, just enough to suggest sincerity without overselling it.
âshe has no political affiliations, no family ties, no suspicious history. sheâs been in the outer court six months and caused no disruptions. the only people who mention her are the ones sheâs treated, and they talk about her like sheâs something they dreamed during a feverâthere but not quite real.â
he didnât mention the late nights heâd spent tracing palace gossip until it led to your name, or how no one seemed to agree on what you looked like, only that you were quiet, clean, and dangerous in the way truly intelligent women often were.
âsheâs better than most of our court physicians,â he said simply. âmore hygienic too. she washes her hands, makes her patients do the same. revolutionary concept, apparently.â
the emperor gave him a lookâhard to read, as always, but with an edge of something that might have been amusement.
âa woman like that, appearing out of nowhere with such skills.â
âsuspicious, yes,â satoru agreed readily. âbut also exactly what this court needs. what the women deserve. and...â he paused, letting the weight of unspoken words settle between them. âwhat you need.â
the temperature in the room seemed to shift, though neither man moved.
âyou want to bring her into the inner court.â
âi want to give her an official appointment. court apothecary with proper access, recognition, protection.â satoru leaned forward slightly, and the afternoon light caught the edge of his silver hair, framing his face in something almost holy. âsheâs worth the risk.â
he waited, watching his fatherâs expression for any sign of rejection. when none came, he pressed on.
âand thereâs another reason.â his voice dropped, becoming something more vulnerable. âyour condition hasnât improved despite everything the court physicians have tried. she might see what theyâve missed, notice something theyâre too set in their ways to consider.â
his voice didnât shake, but it was closer than he wanted. closer than was comfortable.
his father said nothing for a long moment, fingers drumming against the desk in that familiar thinking rhythm satoru remembered from childhood.
âif thereâs even a chance she could help...â
âthen we should take it.â the emperorâs decision came swift and final. âappoint her. sheâll report directly to youâyou brought her to my attention, you can manage her integration into court life.â
relief flooded through satoru like a tide, and he stood quickly, trying not to look as shaken as he felt. âthank you.â
âdonât thank me yet,â the emperor said, and there it wasâthat familiar edge of knowing amusement. âhandling a woman of exceptional skill and mysterious background wonât be simple. especially when thereâs personal investment involved.â
satoru hesitated, then offered what he hoped was a convincing lie. âmy interest is purely professional.â
his fatherâs look could have cut glass. âyouâve described her capabilities in detail but havenât once mentioned her appearance. either sheâs remarkably plain, or youâre working very hard not to think about how she looks.â
âi hadnât noticed.â
âmm.â it wasnât quite a sound, more like a judgment rendered and filed away for future reference.
âinform the steward of her appointment,â the emperor added, returning his attention to the documents spread across his desk. âand do it properly. if youâre going to gamble on someone, donât play your hand halfway.â
satoru bowed again, quick and precise, then left the room feeling like heâd been carefully dissected and sewn back together.
the hallway outside hummed with the usual quiet motion of palace lifeâservants gliding past with tea trays, scribes shuffling along with scrolls tucked into their sleeves, the distant sound of a flute meandering through some half-finished melody. normal sounds, normal sights, but everything felt different now.
youâd be staying. elevated to a position where your skills could be properly utilized, where he could watch you work and maybe, eventually, understand what drove someone with your abilities to hide among the servants.
he tried not to smile as he headed toward the inner court to deliver news that would change everything. tried and failed completely.
the first thing satoru noticed was the crack in your expressionânot a chasm, just a flicker, like a lanternâs flame caught in a draft. he was always watching for it, his eyes sharp as a hawkâs, trained to catch the smallest tells in a court where lies were currency and truths were contraband.
that blink-and-you-miss-it smileâthe quiet, cautious pride that bloomed when the summons reached youâvanished the instant your gaze landed on him in the receiving hall.
you went still, not with fear but with the kind of disappointment that stings like a paper cut, laced with offense, as if someone had promised you a jade pendant and handed you a wriggling rat instead.
he found it utterly delightful.
âyou,â you said, the word a curse wrapped in velvet, sharp enough to draw blood.
âme,â satoru replied, spreading his arms just enough to invite applause, his grin a crescent of pure mischief. his robes today were pale violet, embroidered with butterflies that shimmered like moonlight on water, each thread catching the lantern glow with ostentatious grace.
his hair was twisted into a gold pin, too ornate for a eunuch but perfectly satoru, perched in the grey space where rules bent to his whims. a fine line of kohl rimmed his lashes, accentuating eyes that sparkled with dramatic intentâbecause if he had to endure the stifling heat and court nonsense, heâd damn well look like a painting while doing it.
the head steward droned on, his voice a monotonous hum about imperial favor and sacred duty, a speech satoru couldâve recited in his sleep.
he didnât bother pretending to listen.
he was too busy cataloging your betrayals: the faint hitch in your breath, like a zither string plucked too hard; the way your hands folded, knuckles whitening as if gripping an invisible blade; the defiant tilt of your chin, a silent challenge to the world. you were furious, a bonfire masquerading as a lantern, and oh, how you tried to cloak it in courtly composure. but satoru saw the embers, and they thrilled him.
he caught the moment realization struck you, sharp as a needle: this wasnât just a promotion. this was proximity. to him.
âthe inner court welcomes you,â the steward concluded, his voice fading into the hallâs polished silence.
âiâm sure it does,â you said, your tone sugared with venom, each syllable a dart aimed at satoruâs smug face.
once the others dispersed, satoru glided forward, arms tucked within his sleeves, his voice dropping into that soft, insincere purr he saved for spooking cats and bureaucrats. âcongratulations,â he said, leaning just close enough to make you bristle. âyouâve ascended. fresh linens, finer herbs, a view of the lotus pond. and, of course, me.â
you blinked at him, slow and deliberate, like a cat deciding whether to swipe or ignore. âis it too late to crawl back to scrubbing pans?â you asked, your deadpan so perfect it deserved its own pavilion.
âdonât flatter yourself,â he said, his grin widening, sharp as a crescent moon. âyouâll still scrubâjust not linen. now itâs egos and temperaments, lotus tea for headaches, petals for petty heartbreaks. all the flowers of the inner court, lovingly pruned by your hand.â
âthrilling,â you muttered, the word dripping with disdain, as if youâd rather mop the emperorâs stables. âa promotion and a leash.â
ânot a leash,â satoru said, pressing a hand to his chest with a mock gasp. âcompanionshipâunsolicited, exquisitely dressed, and utterly unavoidable.â
and there it wasâthe faintest twitch at the corner of your mouth, not a smile but a threat, like a blade half-drawn from its sheath. he liked it. no, he adored it, the way it promised trouble as much as it deflected his own.
he lingered a beat too long, eyes glinting like polished jade, before turning and strolling off, his robes fluttering like a butterflyâs wings, as if the world spun on his axis. and maybe, just maybe, it did.
later that evening, purely by coincidence (his words, not truthâs), he found himself drifting past your new quarters. entirely by accident (again, his words). three times, his steps echoing softly on the stone path, each pass a little slower, a little bolder. the fourth time, he stopped.
he waited until the courtyard shadows stretched long, pooling like ink beneath the flickering lanterns that cast gold over the tiles. then, with the humility of a man whoâd never known the word, satoru leaned against your doorframe, one hand toying with the edge of a scroll, its wax seal glinting like a conspiratorâs wink.
âwhat,â you said, not turning from the table where you sorted herbs, your voice flat as a bladeâs edge.
âi brought a gift,â he said brightly, his tone all sunshine and mischief, as if heâd just unearthed a treasure.
âis it my resignation?â you asked, still not looking, your fingers pausing over a vial of crushed ginseng.
âbetter. a medical mystery.â he stepped inside, uninvited, and held out the scroll, its parchment crinkling faintly. you didnât take it, of course. you just stared, expression as unyielding as the palace walls, as if calculating whether a pestle could double as a club.
finally, you snatched it, your movements sharp, and scanned the text with a flick of your eyes. âthese symptoms contradict each other,â you said, voice clipped, like you were scolding a particularly dense apprentice.
âi know,â satoru said, leaning against a lacquered cabinet, his sleeve brushing a jar that wobbled but didnât fall.
âthis is fabricated,â you added, your glare pinning him like a butterfly to a board.
âonly the illness,â he said, undeterred, his smile a spark in the dim room. âthe need for your attention? painfully real.â
you sighed, loud and theatrical, a performance worthy of the imperial stage. satoru mentally awarded it a nine out of tenâsolid, but you couldâve thrown in a hair toss for flair.
you unrolled the scroll again, your lips twitching in a scowl as you muttered, âridiculous.â the word was a dart, but satoru caught it like a prize.
âyouâre a parasite in silk,â you said, louder now, tossing the scroll onto the table with a flick of your wrist. âthe most useless eunuch in three dynasties, and thatâs saying something.â
âflattery will get you everywhere,â he replied, utterly unfazed, his fingers brushing the edge of a clay bowl as he wandered your space like he owned it. âkeep going, iâm taking notes.â
âi wasnât flattering you,â you snapped, finally turning to face him, your eyes blazing like a forge.
âthatâs what makes it so charming,â he said, his grin widening, as if your ire was a rare vintage he couldnât resist savoring.
you shot him a look that couldâve curdled goat milk, then turned back to your work, your fingers moving with the precision of a calligrapher, sorting herbs into neat piles. but you kept the scroll, its corner peeking from beneath a stack of notes, and your muttering continuedâsnatches of âinsufferable peacockâ and âwhy is this my lifeâ drifting like smoke.
satoru prowled your quarters, ignoring the way your gaze tracked his hands, as if you were mentally mapping every pressure point from wrist to neck.
he brushed his fingers over jars, their labels curling at the edges, and peeked into a box of tools, its contents gleaming faintly in the lantern light. he didnât speak, just watchedâthe furrow of your brow as you concentrated, the deliberate flick of your wrist as you ground yanhusuo, the rhythm of your work like a silent song.
he didnât know why he stayed.
or rather, he did, but admitting it felt like stepping into a trap of his own making. you were a puzzle with edges that cut, a contradiction that hooked him deeper with every barb. the faint scent of crushed herbs clung to the room, mingling with the wisp of incense curling from a burner, and it anchored him there, tethered to the moment.
when he finally slipped out, you didnât look up, hunched over your desk, scribbling notes like you were waging war on the scrollâs nonsense. but as he passed the water basin by the door, its surface caught your reflectionâa glare aimed at his retreating back, sharp and searing, like a blade thrown in silence.
it made his whole damn day.
he found suguru by the koi pond, pacing the stone path, hands clasped behind his back like a tutor bracing for a lecture on broken vases. the moonlight glinted off the water, the fish darting like silver needles beneath the surface.
âdonât say it,â satoru said, cutting him off before a word could escape.
âyou like her,â suguru said anyway, his voice dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs, each syllable a judgment.
âi said donât say it,â satoru shot back, tossing his hair with a flourish, the gold pin catching the light like a star.
âand yet, here we are,â suguru said, his gaze flicking to satoruâs face, reading the spark there with the ease of a man whoâd seen this play before.
satoru sighed, dramatic and long-suffering, tilting his head to the moon as if it might explain why his heart thrummed like a war drum. âiâm just monitoring a potential threat,â he said, the lie so flimsy it barely held together.
âsure,â suguru said, his lips twitching, not quite a smile. âbecause that gleam in your eyes screams caution.â
âiâm delightful,â satoru corrected, spinning on his heel, his robes flaring like a dancerâs.
suguru groaned, the sound heavy with the weight of a thousand future apologies. âyouâre doomed.â
and he was probably right. but gods, what a glorious disaster to waltz into, with you at its heartâsharp-tongued, untamed, a flame that burned brighter than satoruâs own, and twice as dangerous.
satoru had never been a creature of habit.
routines were for bureaucrats, monks, and men with lives too dull to warrant a second glance. he craved spontaneity, thrived in chaos, relished derailing the meticulously stacked schedules of others like a fox scattering a henhouse.
unpredictability was his dance, disruption his song. so the fact that he now drifted down the same shaded corridor every morningâat roughly the same hour, with the same lazy gait and the same infuriating glint in his eyeâwas a confession heâd never voice aloud.
not that heâd admit it, even to himself.
his excuses shifted like the seasons. delivering a scroll to a scribe who didnât exist. inspecting inner court security for threats that never materialized. dodging paperwork that multiplied like roaches in the archives. conducting a surprise audit of herbal stores. critiquing the palace tea for âquality control.â evading a minister whose droning voice on strategy briefings could bore a statue to tears.
each alibi flimsier than the last, but satoru wielded them with the confidence of a man who knew the world would bend to his whims.
really, it was one thing. one person.
you.
he found you as alwaysâelbow-deep in some concoction, sleeves knotted tightly past your elbows, hair pinned in a haphazard bun that threatened to unravel with every movement.
a faint smudge of greenâlicorice root, perhapsâstained your cheekbone, a badge of your battle against the chaos you wove and tamed.
you were a paradox: a whirlwind of spilled herbs and scattered parchment, yet sharper, more focused than any silk-clad noble posturing in the emperorâs court. you looked like a battlefield medic with a grudge against decorum and a vendetta against wasted time, and it never failed to spark both amusement and distraction in satoruâs usually restless mind.
âyou again,â you said, voice dry as crushed ginger, not bothering to lift your eyes from the mortar where you pulverized a root with grim determination.
âyou sound shocked,â satoru replied, stepping over the threshold with a roll of his shoulder, his robesâdeep cream silk embroidered with winding cranes that shimmered with each stepâswaying like mist over a dawn lake.
todayâs ensemble was absurdly extravagant for a glorified supply closet, the fabric catching the lantern light in soft ripples. his hair, loosely tied at the nape, let silver strands frame his face, and a delicate trace of plum-red pigment accented the corners of his eyes, a flourish that screamed performance. he was too much, and that was precisely the point.
âi thought weâd settled into a rhythm,â he said, leaning against your worktable, perilously close to your neatly bundled herbs and stacked parchment. âme, you, the tang of crushed roots, and that slow-simmering resentment you wear so well.â
you didnât answer. instead, you ground the pestle with a force that suggested the root had slandered your ancestors, the bowl rattling faintly under your wrath.
he tilted his head, silver hair catching the warm glow like threads of starlight, his ringsâthree today, each etched with faint sigilsâclicking softly against the tableâs edge.
âno one else to pester?â you muttered, jaw tight, your fingers flexing around the pestle as if it might double as a weapon. âno decrees to ignore? no ministers to torment?â
âoh, plenty,â he said, his grin slow and sharp, like a blade unsheathed for show. âbut none of them look half as charming when theyâre plotting my demise.â
your hand stilled, the pestle clicking sharply against the bowl, a punctuation of pure exasperation. he nearly clapped, delighted by the precision of your irritation.
because it wasnât just that you disliked himâplenty did, and he wore their scorn like a badge. you didnât pretend. no groveling, no fawning, no hollow courtesies offered to his eunuchâs guise. your disdain was raw, unfiltered, a silent roar in every glance.
it was refreshing, like a cold stream after too long in the palaceâs stifling opulence, and deeply, wickedly entertaining.
he returned the next day. and the day after. each visit a little bolder, a little longer, as if testing how far he could push before you snapped.
sometimes he brought absurdities disguised as inquiries: a scroll detailing a servant who sprouted hives when he lied, complete with fictional case notes. another time, a cracked jade hairpin, its edges worn smooth, which he claimed induced fevers under a full moonâs gaze.
once, he presented a koi scale in a silk pouch, its iridescence glinting like a stolen star, declaring it a rare cure for heartacheâjust to see if youâd fling it at him.
you did, with the aim of an archer, the scale skittering across the floor as you muttered something about âidiots in silk.â he gave you a mental ovation.
he started noticing thingsâmore than he meant to, more than was wise. you drank your tea standing, spine rigid, eyes flicking to the window like you expected a rope ladder to unfurl. you reused parchment, scribbling notes in the margins of torn festival flyers or crumpled ceremonial edicts, your script tight and precise.
your tools gleamed, arranged like a generalâs arsenal, each blade and vial in its place, but your hair perpetually slipped its pins, curling defiantly against your neck until you shoved it back with an impatient hand.
you hummed when you thought no one heardâa fleeting melody, half-forgotten, like a song from a village far from the palaceâs red walls. your brows twitched, a subtle dance, when you puzzled over a formula. your lips curled, just so, a heartbeat before you unleashed an insult, as if savoring the barb.
and despite every barbed word, every glare sharp enough to draw blood, you never truly banished him. not really.
âyou know,â he said one afternoon, sprawled in the corner of your workspace, one leg tucked beneath him like a cat claiming a sunbeam, his sleeves pooling like spilled cream, âyou havenât thanked me.â
âfor what?â you asked, voice muffled as you rummaged behind a bamboo curtain, the clink of vials punctuating your words. âwrecking my mornings like a plague in peacock feathers?â
âfor ushering you into the inner court,â he said, tipping his head back against the wall, silver hair cascading over his shoulder like moonlight spilling across snow. the motion was deliberate, a painterâs stroke, and he knew it.
a beat. then the sharp scrape of wood as you slammed a drawer shut, the sound a silent curse. you emerged, clutching a bundle of dried leaves, your glare sour enough to wilt the lotuses in the courtyard.
âright,â you said, each word a blade honed to kill. âmy deepest thanks for the promotion i wanted and the permanent shadow it dragged in.â
âshouldnât you be grateful?â he teased, propping his chin in his hand, rings glinting as he traced the edge of a nearby jar. âi handed you the emperorâs courtâprestige, resources, a front-row seat to my radiance.â
you turned to him, slow and deliberate, like a swordmaster sizing up a foolhardy opponent. âand i curse it every dawn,â you said, your voice low, each syllable a spark. âif iâd known you came tethered like a leech, iâd have begged to stay in the outer court, scrubbing pans in peace.â
he clutched his chest, a theatrical gasp, his eyes sparkling with mock agony. âyou wound me, truly.â
ânot yet,â you muttered, turning back to your leaves, your fingers ripping a stalk with unnecessary force. âbut iâm practicing.â
his grin widened, sharp as a crescent moon, and he settled deeper into his perch, as if your scorn were an invitation to stay.
and you let him. not with words, never with warmth, but with the absence of a broom or a thrown pestle. and he kept returning, drawn by the rhythm youâd carved between youâinsult, retort, silence. a glance, then another, lingering like a brush of silk. proximity that stretched longer than it should, close enough to feel the heat of your irritation, the weight of your presence.
it wasnât peaceâgods, never peaceâbut something like understanding, a pattern etched in barbed words and stolen moments. a hum beneath the surface, unnamed, unacknowledged, but growing louder with each visit.
then came the laughâsharp, unexpected, a single burst when he presented a âcaseâ about a noble who sneezed only during poetry recitals. your eyes crinkled, head tilting back for a heartbeat, the sound bright and unguarded before you smothered it, your face twisting into a scowl as if youâd betrayed yourself. you looked like you wanted to burn the room down to erase it.
satoru stared, too long, too openly, catching the way your cheeks flushed, the way you ducked your head to hide it. he saw you glance at him, then away, quick as a startled bird, and something in his chest tuggedâsharp, stupid, undeniable.
he left that day with a thought that prickled like a splinter: he was in deeper trouble than heâd planned, and it was entirely, gloriously your fault.
todayâs morning puzzle was more unhinged than usual.
âman experiences nosebleeds only in the presence of caged birds,â you read aloud, your tone so flat it couldâve scraped the lacquer off the palace floors. âand when exposed to lacquerware.â
satoru, sprawled in his usual corner of your workspace like a sculpture no one ordered, blinked with the kind of innocence that fooled no one, least of all you. his robeâwarm ivory threaded with golden phoenix feathersâcaught the dawnâs light, casting fleeting sparks against the wall like a firecrackerâs afterglow. his hair, braided with a defiant thread of red silk (he knew you loathed it), spilled over one shoulder with the precision of a stage cue.
he was every inch the frivolous, silk-draped menace he aimed to be, his ringsâtwo today, etched with coiling dragonsâglinting as he propped an elbow on a crate of dried herbs.
âdonât you think thereâs a tragedy woven in that?â he asked, voice too chipper for the hour, like a bird chirping before the world had rubbed sleep from its eyes.
âyouâre banned from tragedy,â you snapped, shutting the scroll with a crack that made a passing maid jump, her tray of tea wobbling. you tossed it onto the table, narrowly missing a jar of powdered rhubarb, its clay surface dusted with your fingerprints.
this wasnât his first medical case, nor even the twentieth. heâd stopped counting around the time he concocted a patient who sneezed whenever lies were spoken nearby.
what began as a gameâprobing your diagnostic skill with obscure, half-invented symptomsâhad spiraled into a ritual as absurd as it was unshakable. yet you read every one. scrawled notes in their margins. laced them with insults sharp enough to draw blood. returned them smudged with ink and bristling with barely restrained fury.
he hoarded them like relics.
âyou shouldâve seen the drafts,â he said, as if that salvaged anything. âthe first version had goose feathers and wine fumes. i spared you.â
âif this is your plot to bury me in professional shame,â you said, wrenching open a jar of salves with a force that suggested personal vendetta, âyouâre nearly there.â
he tilted his head, a single silver strand slipping free, brushing the curve of his ear like a painterâs afterthought. he watched you moveâalways with purpose, always taut as a bowstring. you no longer flinched at his presence, but you never softened either. you wielded words like scalpels, keeping him at bay with precision cuts.
he liked sharp things. always had.
at first, the game was straightforward: deliver impossible cases, watch you unravel them, maybe coax a laugh if the stars aligned.
they never did.
you didnât laugh. but you scowled, rolled your eyes, muttered poetic venom into your mortar as you ground herbs to dust. you called him names with the accuracy of a physician lancing a woundââpeacock,â ânuisance,â âsilk-clad calamityââeach one a tiny victory he tucked away like a magpie with trinkets.
âthis isnât a diagnosis,â you muttered now, flipping the scroll open to scrawl furious notes, your brush slashing the parchment like a blade. âthis is a poem having a tantrum.â
âyou wound me,â he said, pressing a hand to his chest as if your words could be stitched into his ribs. âyouâre the only one whoâs ever called me poetic.â
âyouâre the only fool in this empire whose puzzles come with a musical accompaniment,â you shot back, your brush pausing mid-stroke, ink pooling at the tip.
he grinned, quick and wicked. âyou noticed?â
âyou brought a flautist last week,â you said, voice flat as a bladeâs edge. âhe tripped on your sash.â
âhe needed the practice,â satoru said, smooth as polished jade, his fingers tracing the rim of a nearby vial, its glass cool under his touch.
you didnât bother responding, just turned back to your work, sharpening a bundle of dried ginger with a knife that gleamed like a silent threat. the bladeâs rhythm was steady, each slice a rebuke to his existence.
he watched it all. the way your hands danced, precise yet restless, as if they could never quite settle. the way your lips pressed thin when you read something particularly absurd, a silent curse forming before you spoke. how your hair, always slipping its pins, curled defiantly at your nape, streaked with ink from fingers too busy to care. how you muttered in a cadence just off-kilter from the palaceâs polished formalities, a dialect of frustration and focus.
you were chaos cloaked in competence, a storm bound by will, and he couldnât look away.
every day, he brought another case. a man who laughed himself into fainting fits during banquets. a servant girl who sleepwalked into the kitchenâs rice stores, waking with flour in her hair. an aristocratâs daughter who swore her vision flipped upside down every other hour, blaming it on cursed earrings.
he scribbled them late at night, brush half-dry, on balconies between court sessions, once even during a poetry recital where he feigned sleep, his sleeve hiding the ink stains. each case a thread, a tether, an excuse to linger in your orbit.
because you read them. frowned. sighed. looked at him.
and the lookingâgods, that was everything. he didnât need your laughter. he craved what came after: the pause after the sigh, the flicker after the eye-roll, that fleeting moment where you seemed to forget you loathed him, where your gaze held something softer, unguarded, before you rebuilt your walls.
âi should report you,â you said now, your brush scratching the parchment with deliberate force, each stroke a small rebellion.
âfor what?â he asked, shifting to prop his chin on one hand, leaning forward like a cat too stubborn to abandon its perch. âcreative medicine?â
âfor impersonating someone with a shred of sense,â you said, your voice low, each word a dart aimed at his ego.
he made a wounded noise, theatrical and bright, but his smile stretched wider. âi have sense. i just keep it locked away, like a heirloom too fine for daily use.â
you gave him a look, long and withering, that couldâve soured wine. it only made his grin sharpen, his rings catching the light as he tapped the tableâs edge, a rhythm to match your knifeâs steady cuts.
âyou treat patients like mildew treats silk,â you said, tossing the ginger aside and reaching for a vial, your fingers brushing a stray leaf that clung to your sleeve like a conspirator.
he laughedânot the polished chuckle he offered concubines or ministers, but a real one, sharp and sudden, echoing in the cramped quarters like a misfired firework.
your eyes snapped to him, and for a heartbeat, you werenât just annoyed. not entirely. there was something else, a flicker of surprise, maybe curiosity, gone before he could name it. but it tightened his chest, a knot he couldnât untie.
he kept bringing puzzlesânot for their cleverness, not for their humor, but because they carved a space for him in your shadow. they let him listen to your muttered curses, watch your hands move like a weaverâs, feel the weight of your presence. they let him be noticed, even if only as a thorn in your side.
and maybe they let him be wanted there, if only for the span of a scowl.
âwhy are you like this?â you asked one morning, your brush stilling mid-stroke, the question dangerously soft, like a blade hidden in silk.
he had a dozen quips readyâflippant, charming, deflecting. but he leaned forward, caught the way a loose strand of hair curled near your temple, ink-smudged and defiant, and said, soft and unguarded, âyou look alive when youâre annoyed.â
you froze, your brush hovering, a drop of ink trembling at its tip. then, slowly, you looked up. met his eyes, their blue sharp and unguarded, like a sky before a storm.
he smiledânot mocking, not entirely, just a curve of lips that felt too honest for the game you played.
you threw the scroll at his head. it sailed wide, fluttering to the floor like a wounded bird.
he ducked, barely, laughter spilling from him as he retreated, the sound trailing behind like a cometâs tail. your glare followed, searing, but he caught the faintest twitch at your mouth, a ghost of something that wasnât quite hate.
later, he sat beneath the south pavilionâs shade, one leg tucked beneath him, the other dangling off the edge like a boy too restless for propriety.
a breeze tugged at the red sash cinched at his waist, lifting it like a lazy flag, as if even the wind knew he was procrastinating. beside him, scrollsâcourt reports, diplomatic briefs, a poetry contest invitation heâd already singed at the edgesâsat ignored, their wax seals glinting like accusations.
he thought of your scowl, your voice, the way your gaze landed on him like a blade seeking a target. everyone else in the court tiptoed around him, offering flattery or fear.
you never did.
and maybe that was why, every day, without fail, he drifted back to your door, armed with another impossible case, another absurd tale. each one a thread to bind him to you, a reason to linger, to disrupt, to be seen.
because the worst part of his morning was the hour before he saw youâempty, quiet, a void where his thoughts echoed too loudly.
and the best part? watching you glare like you wanted him gone, yet never quite forcing him out, your silence a grudging invitation to return.
the scrolls were getting longer.
not just longerâdenser, labyrinthine, absurdly ornate. satoru had upgraded to calligraphy brushes dipped in perfumed inkârosewater one day, sandalwood the next, a faint whiff of osmanthus lingering on the parchment like a taunt.
he was testing how long itâd take before you snapped and hurled something profane, maybe the inkstone itself. the symptoms wove intricate webs, the logic knotted like a courtierâs braid, the footnotes teetering on operatic.
he cited phantom case studies, fictitious physicians from provinces that didnât exist, and once, with brazen pride, slipped in a forged imperial seal that nearly landed him in front of a magistrate. nearly. that one, heâd written in couplets, each line a smug little bow.
âyouâre wasting my time with this drivel,â you snapped, brandishing the scroll like it carried a plague. âdonât you have feathers to preen or mirrors to seduce?â
he was perched, as always, on the low bench by your window, posed like a statue some lovesick noble commissioned and regretted. his posture was too perfect for someone whoâd spent half an hour picking a robe to irk you mostâstorm blue, embroidered with cranes mid-flight, sleeves pooling over his knees like spilled ink, dragging across the floor with every restless shift.
a gold hairpin gleamed in his braid, red silk threaded through it, swaying like a pendulum when he tilted his head in mock fascination. he was a painting overburdened with flourishes, every detail screaming excess.
âyour thorns are almost charming,â he said, sipping from a porcelain cup, its rim chipped from a prior visit when heâd âaccidentallyâ knocked it off your table. his boots, still flecked with courtyard mud, left faint smudges on your floor. âlike a pufferfish dreaming of cuddles.â
you fixed him with a stareâslow, lethal, the kind that could sour fresh cream or silence a minister mid-rant. the breeze from the open lattice tugged at the scrollâs edge, rattling the ash tray, but you didnât blink, your fingers tightening until the parchment crinkled.
he beamed, as if youâd serenaded him.
you muttered something under your breathâlikely a curse involving his tea turning to sludge, his bones melting to tallow, and a cholera revival tour.
he showed up again the next day. and the day after. and again, undeterred, even after you told the guards to âmisplace his map.â they never did, swayed by his bribes of candied lotus and whispered gossip, plus a promise to rank their uniformsâ aestheticsâa scale he invented on the spot, complete with commentary on tassel placement.
each scroll outdid the last. a plague afflicting only left-handed nobles, their sneezes synchronized with lunar phases. a woman who could digest only white foods, weeping hysterically at the sight of lotus root, claiming it sang to her in minor keys. a child coughing poetryâverses from a romantic epic banned by the late empress, each stanza more scandalous than the last. one footnote, scrawled sideways in gold ink, taunted, âsolve this with that temper you wield like a blade.â
you unraveled them all, dissecting each with surgical precision. your annotations bled red, sometimes purple for peak offenses, your brushstrokes sharp as a duelistâs thrust.
but somewhere between the sarcastic jabs and hissed curses, your critiques softenedânot in tone, never in tone, but in focus. you asked questions, prodded his logic with a gentler hand, your frowns less like thunderclouds, more like passing shadows.
you lingered over his absurdities, as if they were puzzles worth solving.
not that he noticed. of course not.
suguru did.
âtwelve visits this week,â he said, voice dry as a desert wind, eyes fixed on the go board where satoru was losing spectacularly for forty-five minutes. âshall i carve you a plaque for her door? engrave it with âsatoruâs follyâ?â
satoru flipped a game piece, then flicked it at suguruâs shoulder, where it bounced off his black robes like a pebble off a cliff. âiâm running an experiment.â
âon what?â suguru glanced up, one brow arched like a drawn bow.
âthe effects of sustained hostility and ground herbs on royal composure,â satoru said, his grin a crescent of pure mischief.
suguruâs stare was withering. âfindings?â
âunexpectedly delightful,â satoru said, leaning back, his braid swaying like a metronome.
court sessions were crumbling. satoru, once the deity of theatrical boredomâmaster of mock gasps, swoons timed to derail debates, and insults so sharp they left officials blushingâwas drifting.
he missed the minister of ritesâ botched couplet, a travesty heâd have roasted for weeks. he forgot to deliver a memorandum to the archivesâtwiceâits wax seal cracking from neglect. tax discussions passed in a haze, his fan unopened, his quips dormant. his eyes wandered, tracing patterns in the ceilingâs carved dragons, as if they held answers he didnât dare seek.
suguru kept a tally in his meeting notesâ margins: missed snide remarks: five. disinterest level: catastrophic.
the inner court ladies noticed, their eyes sharp as jade pins, their tongues sharper.
they tracked satoru like hawks circling a wayward sparrow, cataloging his absences with gleeful precision. first, he vanished from their mid-morning gossip salons, leaving their tea untouched and their scandals half-shared. then came his bizarre fixation on medical theory, of all things, muttering about rare fungi and diagnostic riddles like a scholar possessed.
âweâve scarcely seen you,â one lady said during a stroll through the peony courtyard, her fan snapping open like a daggerâs unsheathing, its silk painted with vipers. âhas the emperorâs health grown so dire?â
âoh,â satoru said, voice slow and honeyed, âthe apothecaryâs got a fungus collection thatâs positively riveting. almost as captivating as her glare when i nudge her vials out of order.â
giggles scattered like dropped pearls, sharp and knowing. he offered no further explanation, his smile a closed gate.
that afternoon, he swept into your quarters, scroll in hand, bound with red thread, inked in violet on paper too fine for his nonsenseâproof it was his worst yet. his hair was half-loose, wisps clinging to his cheek where heâd skipped pinning it, a faint ink smear on his thumb from a late-night drafting frenzy. the scroll bore your name, penned at the top in a flourish that dared you to burn it.
you opened it, scanned the first lines, and your expression couldâve shattered a tea bowl. âthis better not rhyme,â you said, voice low, each word a warning shot.
he smiled, too soft at the edges, less smug than something unguarded, like a seam in his silk had frayed. his fingers brushed the benchâs edge, lingering as if to anchor himself, and he watched you read, his gaze catching the way your brow twitched, the way your lips pressed thin.
somewhere beneath the posture, the perfume, the performance, his heart stutteredâa single, traitorous skip.
it was enough to whisper: this was no longer just a game.
he sent a courier three provinces south for a flower that didnât even bloom this season.
âyou dispatched a royal courier to the southern mountains for a sprig of winter jasmine?â suguru asked, voice taut with disbelief, arms folded so tightly it seemed he was trying to cage a migraine. his shadow loomed across the verandaâs polished wood, sharp against the dappled sunlight filtering through the wisteria.
satoru, reclining in the east verandaâs shade, swirled his teacup with a lazy flick of his wrist, the liquid long gone cold and forgotten. âitâs for a case,â he said, shrugging, stretching one leg until his silken robes spilled over the floor like ivory ink, catching flecks of light.
his fan lay discarded beside him, its painted cranes motionless, but his posture screamed decadence: languid limbs, robe slipping to bare the gleam of his collarbone, silver hair a cascade tucked behind one ear, a blue cord woven through for no reason but to catch the eye.
âitâs a seasonal ornamental,â suguru snapped, his boots clicking as he took a half-step forward, resisting the urge to pace. ânot medicine. not even symbolic medicine. itâs for perfume, satoru. perfume.â
âdepends on the metaphor,â satoru replied, grinning without looking, his gaze drifting past suguruâs scowl to the corridor snaking toward the inner court. his ringsâtwo, etched with lotus vinesâglinted as he tilted the cup, letting it catch the light like a conspiratorâs signal.
suguru dragged a hand down his face, his sigh heavy enough to stir the wisteria petals scattered nearby. âiâm going to strangle you with that sash.â
âyouâd have to catch me first,â satoru said, raising the cup in a mock toast, his grin sharp as a bladeâs edge.
he had no intention of explaining. not the three couriers heâd sent in secret, their horses kicking dust across provinces. not the velvet-wrapped parcel one returned, petals still dewed from mountain mist, their fragrance curling like a secret. and definitely not the way your brow furrowedâhalf suspicion, half aweâwhen he set the sprig on your worktable, its silk wrapping unfurling like a bribe from a poet.
âthis is fresh,â you said, nose wrinkling, holding the jasmine between two fingers like it might bite. âthis isnât local. not even close.â
âi know,â he said, voice bright as festival lanterns, chin propped on one hand as he watched you with the shameless glee of a man too pleased with his own audacity. âgorgeous, isnât it?â
your glare couldâve sterilized a scalpel. âyouâre unbearable.â
âand yet, here i linger,â he said, his sleeve brushing a vial as he leaned closer, just enough to make you stiffen.
âtragically,â you muttered, tossing the sprig onto a parchment, where it landed like a fallen star.
he stayed longer that dayâfar longer, until the shadows slanted sharp and the afternoonâs warmth bled into duskâs cool edge. your tea sat untouched, its steam long gone. your sighs grew louder, each one a performance, yet you never shoved him out. he watched you work: arms bare to the elbow, sleeves knotted loosely, hands stained with pigment and resin, moving like the shelves and tables were extensions of your will.
you always faced the window when handling volatile herbs, not for light, heâd learned, but for the breeze, its faint stir cutting the fumes and teasing loose strands of your hair.
he cataloged it all. the way you hummed when focusedâfractured, tuneless, like a half-remembered lullaby from a village beyond the palaceâs reach.
it wasnât daily, but frequent enough that he timed his arrivals to catch its fading notes. the way you sorted jars by scentâcamphor to the left, ginseng to the rightâignoring strength or tradition. how you cracked your knuckles before mixing tinctures, a sharp pop like a soldier before battle. the pause before you spoke to him, as if weighing which barb would cut deepest.
it was intoxicating, like chasing the edge of a storm.
he crafted excuses to linger: forged dosage errors scrawled on stolen parchment, misfiled records he âdiscoveredâ in dusty archives, fake prescriptions only he knew were nonsense. once, he claimed mint sensitivity just to spar with you over its diagnostic merit. he lost, spectacularly, your rebuttal so sharp it left him grinning for hours.
âiâm starting to think youâre a fixture here,â you said one afternoon, not looking up as he sauntered in, uninvited. your hands were buried in a jar of powdered ginseng, your hair falling into your face, dusted with chalk like a scribeâs error.
âdonât be absurd,â he said, claiming the spare cushion by your shelves with the ease of a man whoâd never heard the word no. his robeâcobalt blue, stitched with black cranes and storm cloudsâpooled around him, dramatic and excessive, its hem brushing a stray leaf youâd missed. âi have other haunts. theyâre just less⌠stabby.â
âand less likely to throw you out?â you asked, flicking a speck of dust from your sleeve, your tone dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs.
âprecisely,â he said, his grin a spark in the dim room.
you didnât laugh, but you didnât banish him either. and when your hand grazed his sleeveâa fleeting, accidental brush as you reached for a vialâyou didnât pull back. didnât flinch. the contact, barely a whisper, burned in his mind like a brand.
he was too comfortable now, not just in your space but in your orbitâyour rhythms, your silences, the way you tilted your head before a fight, lips pursing when you swallowed a sharper retort. you insulted him with the grace of someone whoâd decided he wasnât worth charming, each barb a masterpiece of disdain.
it was the truest exchange he had all day.
no one else dared. but you? you called him a fungus with delusions of grandeur. you said his robes looked like a peacock mugged by a thunderstorm. you told him his puzzles were âan affront to medicine and common sense.â
and still, he returned. because every insult was a flare, every glance a challenge, every unspoken word a riddle more gripping than any court intrigue.
he told himself it was curiosity. a game. a puzzle to unravel.
but if that were true, why did he measure his day by how long he could linger before you snapped? why did he trace the curl of your handwriting in his mind, the rhythm of your humming, the way you bit your cheek when lost in thought?
and why, when he left, did the world feel a little flatter, the colors muted, like a painting left unfinished?
lately, he wasnât sure if he was studying you or unraveling himself. each visit chipped away at his excuses, leaving something rawer, riskier, in its place. he caught himself watching not just your hands but the faint scar on your knuckle, the way your eyes softened when you thought no one saw. he noticed how you lingered, tooânot in words, but in the way you let him stay, let him disrupt, let him fill the silence with his nonsense.
he was in too deep, and the worst part? he didnât care.
because every sprig of jasmine, every forged case, every stolen ribbon was a thread pulling him closer to youâand he was too far gone to cut it.
it began with a flower.
well, no. it began with a lie about a flower.
âlunar-affected fever,â satoru said, voice solemn yet dripping with drama, holding a scroll like it was an imperial decree rather than a parchment stuffed with absurdity.
he lounged across your workspaceâs threshold, as if the breeze itself had swept him in, robes of slate grayâstitched with pale moons that shimmered faintlyâbillowing with each subtle shift. his hair, half-tied with a silver pin, caught the filtered sunlight, glinting like spun thread, a few strands curling defiantly against his jaw. ârare as a comet. strikes only under moonlight. fever, dizziness, faint prophetic dreams. possibly contagious.â
you didnât look up. didnât pause. just dipped your brush in ink with the precision of a surgeon, your movements steady as stone. âthere is no such thing as lunar-affected fever,â you said, voice flat as a pressed leaf, not even indulging him with a sigh.
he tsked, tapping the scroll against his palm like a tutor poised to chide a wayward pupil. âhow can you be sure without seeing the flower?â
your head liftedâslow, deliberate, your eyes locking onto his with a glare sharp enough to wither an orchard. your lips pursed, brow twitching, a silent vow of retribution etched in your expression.
satoruâs smile widened, blue eyes sparking with mischief, like a cat whoâd just knocked a vase to the floor and called it art.
which is how you found yourselfâagainst logic, reason, and three stern vows to your own sanityâtrailing him through the moonlit paths of the imperial gardens, gravel crunching softly under your sandals.
your sleeves were tugged tight around your wrists, knotted to keep them from snagging on stray branches. your hair, pinned in a hasty bun, unraveled in soft curls that clung to your temples, damp from the nightâs humidity. you walked in silence, letting the faint whisper of your steps speak for you.
ahead, satoru moved with the effortless grace of someone who owned every pebble, every leaf. the lantern in his hand swayed, its warm glow dancing across the path, painting his silver hair with flecks of gold, like a halo he didnât deserve.
he glanced back now and then, just to check you were still there. each time, his smirk softened for a heartbeat, a flicker of something unguarded, before he faced forward, humming a tuneless melody under his breath, the sound weaving into the night like a secret.
âyou couldâve just asked me to see a flower,â you muttered at his back, your voice low, edged with exasperation.
âand skip the theatrics?â he half-turned, walking backward with infuriating ease, his robes catching the moonlight in ripples. âyou wound me.â
the pavilion he led you to crouched in shadow, draped in ivy and curling wisteria, their leaves glistening with dew. moonlight poured through the open beams, silvering the air, catching the faint mist that clung to the ground. the night carried a sharp, green bite of moss, layered with something sweeter, fragile, like a bloom holding its breath.
and there it was: the night-blooming cereus.
its petals unfurled, slow and tentative, as if coaxing itself into existence. the bloom glowed, ethereal, held together by moonlight and whispers, its edges curling like a secret shared in the dark.
âit blooms once a year,â satoru said, voice softer now, stripped of its usual flourish. he stepped beside you, not quite touching, but close enough for the warmth of his presence to brush your skin. âonly under a full moon. they call it the queen of the night.â
your lips parted, breath catching, a faint hitch you couldnât hide. your arms, folded in defiance moments ago, slowly loosened, fingers twitching as if to reach out. your eyes locked on the flower, and for the first time in days, your face shiftedâbrow easing, mouth softening, the hard edges melting away. you werenât the court apothecary, nor the wary prisoner of palace games.
you were someone rediscovering wonder, like a child glimpsing a star for the first time.
âbeautiful,â you whispered, the word escaping before you could cage it, fragile as the bloom itself.
satoru wasnât watching the flower.
âyes,â he said, voice barely a murmur, âit is.â
he stared at you, caught in the moonlightâs caress on your cheekbone, the soft curve of your profile. his fingers flexed, not to touch, but to hold the momentâthe way your eyes shimmered, the faint flush on your skin, the curl of hair clinging to your temple. he wanted to etch it into memory, to keep it sharper than any painting.
the silence stretched, warm and alive, a fragile bubble of stillness that pulsed with its own rhythm. the night held you both, the cereus glowing between, its petals trembling as if aware of the weight it carried.
thenâpredictably, perfectlyâyou shattered it.
âwhat a waste of my night,â you muttered, spinning away with a dramatic eye-roll, your sleeve swishing like a curtain falling on a play.
but your hands betrayed you.
you reached for the bloom with a reverence that belied your words, cupping it as if it might crumble to dust. when you turned, you cradled it to your chest, fingers curled protectively, like guarding a secret you hadnât meant to claim.
satoru didnât tease. didnât speak. he fell into step beside you, lantern swinging gently, casting slow-dancing shadows that tangled with the gravel path. he stole glances as you walked, catching the way you peeked at the flowerâonce, twice, like you needed to be sure it was real. your sandals scuffed softly, a counterpoint to his silent steps, and the night seemed to lean in, listening.
he didnât sleep that night. not properly. he lay beneath his canopy, robes half-discarded, staring at the lattice ceiling as moonlight slanted through, replaying the curve of your lips, the softness in your eyes, the way youâd held the bloom like it was a piece of yourself youâd forgotten. his chest felt tight, restless, like a bird trapped in a too-small cage.
the next morning, he arrived at your chambers as always, leaning in the doorway like heâd been carved for the space, robes of deep indigo shifting with each breath. you didnât greet him, didnât look up, your focus buried in a stack of parchment, your hair already slipping its pins, ink smudged on one knuckle.
same sleeves. same scowl. same you.
but when he leaned too close, feigning interest in your notes, his eyes caught it: pressed between the worn pages of your herbarium, nestled beside meticulous entries on sedatives, the cereus. flattened, pale, its glow dimmed but defiant, like a star pinned to earth.
your handwriting, precise and sharp: epiphyllum oxypetalum. blooms once yearly, under full moon. fragile.
he said nothing. didnât smirk, didnât tease. but his chest ached, a low, slow throb, tender and mortifying, like a bruise he hadnât earned.
for the first time in weeks, he forgot to bring a new case. no scroll, no absurd symptoms, no ribbon-wrapped nonsense. he just stood there, watching you scribble, the silence heavier than it shouldâve been.
and when you finally glanced up, your eyes narrowing at his stillness, he felt itâa tug, sharp and undeniable, like a thread pulling taut between you.
he didnât know what to call it. not yet.
but as he left, his steps lighter than they shouldâve been, he wondered if youâd noticed the absence of his usual chaosâand if, maybe, you missed it.
it started with kiyohiro, a court eunuch, collapsing in the corridor outside your chambers.
not with flair. not convincingly. just a calculated wobble, a practiced sway, before he sank to the floor with a theatrical sigh, clutching his stomach like the palace kitchens had slipped arsenic into his rice.
âabdominal pain,â he groaned, palm pressed to his navel, eyes fluttering as if scripted. âpossibly fatal. i need the court apothecary at once.â
you didnât flinch. didnât glance up. the pestle in your hand ground dried peony root against stone, its rhythm steady, unyielding, like a heartbeat ignoring a storm. âeat fewer sweet buns,â you muttered, voice flat as sunbaked clay, handing a tonic to a maid without breaking stride.
it shouldâve ended there.
but gossip spreads faster than truth in a palace of whispers. by weekâs end, your chambers had become a pilgrimage site for every bored eunuch with a noble title and a flair for drama. a sudden rash? a fluttering pulse? a dizziness that struck only when you entered, your sleeves brushing the air like a challenge?
satoru watched it unfold, his displeasure sharp and simmering. arms crossed, posture a studied nonchalance that screamed irritation, he haunted your doorframe like a specter with a grudge. his robesâtoo fine for indifference, deep indigo threaded with silver lotusesâshimmered under lantern light, his hair tied with lazy precision, glinting like frost on a winter stream.
âremarkable,â he drawled one afternoon, voice silk laced with venom, as he ushered another swooning eunuch out with a smile that never touched his eyes. âhow many eunuchs have fallen mysteriously ill this month?â
you didnât look up, fingers folding linen cloths with deft flicks. âjealous?â
his gaze snapped to you, blue eyes narrowing. your face was a mask, but your hand paused, just once, on the bowlâs rim, a flicker of defiance. âof what?â he said, voice low, edged. âtheir fake ailments or their pitiful flirtations?â
âboth, it seems,â you said, a smirk tugging your lips, mischief woven into your exasperation. your eyes stayed on your work, but your voice carried that familiar spark, like a blade hidden in a sleeve.
your sleeves were rolled to your elbows, dusted with faint lotus bark, strands of hair slipping from their pins to cling to your jaw, damp with the roomâs humid breath. you looked unruffled, impervious to the parade of titled eunuchs feigning ailments to bask in your presence.
satoru, though, was anything but.
not openly. not officially. but he was thereâalways. every time a noble eunuch swept in with a new complaint, satoru materialized, claiming urgent business nearby. every consultation hosted his lounging formâleaning against a lacquered pillar, fan snapping open with a lazy flick. he never interrupted outright. he just⌠watched, his comments slicing with surgical precision.
âtakamasa, you faint in sunlight?â he asked, voice dripping with mock concern, as the young eunuch clutched a silk handkerchief to his chest.
âyes,â takamasa murmured, voice frail. âitâs terribly inconvenientââ
âcurious,â satoru cut in, fan pausing mid-flutter. âwerenât you sprawled in the courtyard yesterday, under midday sun?â
the silence that followed was a masterpiece, heavy and delicious. you didnât bother hiding your eye-roll, your lips twitching as you ground herbs with renewed vigor.
âyouâre absurd,â you told him later, after heâd dismantled enjirouâs complaint of âchronic sighsâ with a single arched brow and a quip about fainting goats.
âiâm diligent,â he said, lips curving, his fan tapping his chin. âyour timeâs too precious for noble fairy tales spun in silk.â
he didnât say the restâthat he loathed how they looked at you, like your attention was a prize to be won with theatrics, like you were a treasure to be claimed with a well-timed swoon. he hated the way their eyes lingered, as if they could buy your focus with flattery or feigned frailty.
then came the emergency.
a kitchen servant collapsed, breath shallow, sweat beading like dew on his brow. no posturing, no poetry. just raw panicâgasps, shouts, the clatter of a dropped tray. his skin burned under touch, his pulse a frantic stutter.
satoru was already there.
he didnât knock, didnât wait. he followed the stretcher into your chambers, sleeves shoved up, hair slipping from its tie, strands catching the sweat on his neck. the usual glint in his eyes was gone, replaced by something taut, focused, like a blade drawn and ready.
you were already in motion.
your face was a mask of calm, eyes sharp as you issued ordersâclear, clipped, commanding. this wasnât the you who wielded wit like a dagger; this was you at war, hands swift and sure, voice steady as stone. you didnât glance at satoru, didnât need to. he moved with you, seamless, like heâd studied your rhythm for months.
he passed you cloths, their edges fraying from haste. helped lift the servant onto a cot, his grip steady but gentle. ground herbs under your curt instructions, his fingers quick, precise, remembering how you liked the mortar angled for rhubarb root, its bitter tang sharp in the air.
âyou actually care about these people,â he said quietly, voice almost lost in the clink of vials, as he handed you a ladle and wiped the servantâs brow with a damp cloth.
âsomeone has to,â you said, eyes fixed on your work, your fingers deftly measuring a tincture. âmost here see servants as props.â
he didnât reply, didnât know how. just kept moving beside you, his sleeves brushing yours in the cramped space, the air thick with bile, heat, and crushed leaves.
the night stretched on. two more servants were carried inâone vomiting, one limp as a rag. the room reeked of sickness and herbs, the floor littered with discarded cloths.
your voice frayed at the edges, your hands trembled onceâbrieflyâbefore you clenched them steady. your braid had come loose, strands sticking to your sweat-damp neck, but you didnât pause to fix it.
satoru stayed.
when it was overâwhen the last fever broke, the last pulse steadiedâyou collapsed into your chair, limbs heavy, breath ragged. your brush slipped, smearing half-written labels across the desk. your eyelids sagged, your head dipping to rest on the crook of your arm, ink smudging your cheek like a childâs mistake.
he approached softly, his outer robe already in hand, its deep indigo folding over your shoulders like a shield. his fingers hovered above your arm, a moment of hesitation, then pulled back, leaving only the faint warmth of the fabric.
your cheek pressed to your arm, breath slow, lips parted in sleep.
he sank into the chair beside you, not touching, not speaking. he tilted his head back against the wall, eyes closing, his own exhaustion pulling at him. his feet throbbed, his fingers stained with bark and ink, but he didnât move.
when you stirred at dawn, throat dry, eyes gritty, he was still thereâhead back, arms folded, mouth slightly open, a faint crease in his brow, like even sleep couldnât ease his tension.
your voice cracked, raw from the night. âyou stayed.â
his eyes opened, slow, steady, like heâd been waiting for you to speak. âsomeone had to make sure you didnât drown in your own brews,â he said, voice hoarse but carrying that familiar lilt, a spark of amusement in the ruin of the night.
you looked at himâreally lookedâand said nothing more. neither did he.
but the silence between you wasnât hollow.
it was heavy, alive, woven with something newâsomething neither of you could name, but both felt, like a pulse beneath the skin.
the summons came at dawn.
no pomp, no ritualâjust a folded slip passed in the corridor, stamped with the emperorâs seal, its wax glinting like a quiet threat. satoru read it in silence, his face a mask, brows twitching faintly before he slipped it into his sleeve.
he rose from the window seat where his tea sat cold, the morning light catching the sheen of his indigo robes. his movements were fluid, but a weight clung to himâanticipation, not fatigue, heavy as a stone sinking in still water.
his father didnât call unless it mattered.
and lately, everything mattered.
the emperorâs chambers were dim, morning sun barely piercing the heavy curtains, casting long shadows across lacquered floors. incense curled in the corners, frankincense and cedar weaving a thick, ancient haze, clinging like a memory too stubborn to fade.
satoru stepped inside quietly, his robesâindigo lined with black, unadornedâswallowing the light. his hair, usually a defiant spill, was pulled into a tight tail, no stray strands, no red cord for flair. he bowed low, spine rigid, fluid as a dancer, but his hands clenched too tightly at his sides, knuckles pale against the silk.
âyouâre late,â the emperor murmured, voice thin but steady, a thread stretched taut.
ânever late,â satoru said, slipping into the chair by the bed without waiting for leave, his tone light but guarded. âjust selectively punctual.â
his father, propped against a mound of cushions, gave a faint huffâhalf breath, half fond rebuke. his eyes, sharp despite their sunken frame, flickered with a spark of the man beneath the crown. his skeletal hand adjusted the jade charm at his wrist, its edges worn smooth by restless habit.
silence fell, heavy, expectant, like the air before a storm.
âwhoever she is,â the emperor said at last, gaze drifting to the far wall where a painted crane seemed to watch, âdonât let her pull you from what matters. your coronation looms closer than we planned.â
satoru stilled, his breath catching, a faint hitch he buried beneath a neutral mask. his lashes flicked, the only sign of the jolt beneath his skin. âitâs strategic,â he said, voice smooth, polished. âshe fascinates me for reasons i canât name. i need to know why.â
the emperor turned slowly, his gaze piercing despite the tremor in his fingers as he smoothed his robeâs folds. âis that why suguru says you linger in her chambers like a moth drunk on lantern light?â
satoruâs eyes dropped to the floor, tracing the mosaic of lotuses and dragons, their curves blurring in the dim glow. suguru, his bodyguard, had seen too muchâevery visit, every scroll, every stolen glanceâand carried it to the emperorâs ear. duty bound him to report, and satoru couldnât fault him, though the sting lingered.
âvery strategic,â the emperor added, voice softening, a faint amusement curling beneath the weariness. âsuguru tells me youâve sent couriers across provinces for her. flowers, of all things.â
satoruâs lips parted, then closed, words dissolving like mist. his fingers tightened on the chairâs edge, the wood cool under his grip.
âshe reminds me of your mother,â the emperor said, eyes drifting to the ceilingâs carved phoenixes, their wings frozen mid-flight. âsharp-tongued. unyielding. challenged me every day of our marriage. made me a better ruler. a better man.â
satoruâs throat burned, a dry ache he couldnât swallow. his gaze stayed on the floor, the weight of his fatherâs words pressing against his chest, fragile and unnameable. he had no reply, no quip to deflect the truth laid bare.
he left with silence draped over him like a second robe, his steps too quiet, his face too blank. guards bowed as he passed, their armor clinking softly, but he didnât see them, his mind tangled in the echo of his fatherâs voice, suguruâs report, and you.
that night, he didnât bring a scroll. no absurd case, no ribbon-wrapped nonsense to make you sigh. he brought flowers.
dahlias, crimson and bold, tied with an ink-dark ribbon, their petals vivid against the muted light of your chambers. dignified, elegant, deliberateâa choice that spoke louder than his usual theatrics.
he entered with a hesitant confidence, like stepping onto a bridge he wasnât sure would hold. the air carried the familiar bite of herbs and ink, softened by the faint musk of drying parchment. you glanced up from your worktable, sleeves rolled, fingers stained with licorice root, one brow arching in quiet surprise.
âthese are forâŚâ he started, holding the bouquet with a care that belied his usual nonchalance, as if the flowers might wilt under a careless grip.
âanother fake ailment?â you cut in, eyes narrowing, though a spark of curiosity flickered beneath the suspicion.
his lips curved, soft, not his usual smirk. âjust thought they suited you.â
you paused, breath hitching for a moment, your fingers stilling over a vial. then you reached out, your hand brushing hisâa flicker of contact, light as a mothâs wing, warm and gone too soon. it was nothing. it was everything.
neither of you moved, not at first. the air held its breath, charged with the weight of that touch.
then you cleared your throat, turned away, busying yourself with a jar that hadnât moved in weeks, its label curling at the edges. he smiled at your back, eyes tracing the slant of your shoulders, the faint tilt of your headâalways left when you were flustered, a detail heâd memorized like a map.
from then on, he brought meals.
not with fanfare. not every night. just often enough to become a rhythm. evenings blurred with your work, and heâd appear, tray in hand, the food simple but warmâsoft rice flecked with sesame, miso delicate as a sigh, sweet egg custards you claimed to dislike but always finished, scraping the bowl when you thought he wasnât looking.
âyou donât have to keep feeding me,â you said one night, chopsticks hovering, steam curling from the rice like a secret.
âand miss watching you eat while insulting my wit?â he said, settling beside you, his knee brushing the tableâs edge. ânever.â
some nights, words came softly, worn by exhaustionâsnatches of court gossip, old memories, musings on the rain like it held answers. other nights, silence reigned, comfortable, heavy with unspoken things.
your chairs drifted closer.
knees brushed beneath the low table. once. then again. neither of you pulled away. his hand rested a little too close to yours. your gaze lingered a little too long. and the quiet between you stayed warm, charged, not innocent, but not yet dangerous.
still disaster bloomed, as it always does, in the quietest breath of night.
the garden held its breath, a rare stillness cloaking the night. the koi pond shimmered under moonlight, liquid silver rippling with each stray breeze, its surface catching the faint glow of lanterns swaying like conspirators. wisteria hung heavy, its scent weaving with damp earth, sharp and fleeting, the air thick with the promise of something about to break.
you walked side by side, sleeves brushing now and then, deliberate in their graze. the concubine youâd treated earlier slept at last, her fever broken, the air in her chambers no longer taut with dread. yet neither of you moved to part, steps slowing as the gardenâs quiet conspired to hold you there.
satoru trailed a half-step behind, hands clasped behind his back, his long robe whispering against the gravel, its pale gray hem catching the lantern glow like mist.
moonlight wove silver through his white hair, sharpened the elegant line of his jaw, made him look like a figure etched from starlight. his eyes, glacial blue, flicked to you every few momentsâmemorizing the curve of your profile, the way your hair curled against your neck, damp from the humid air.
his silence tonight was heavy, careful, like a man cradling a glass too full to spill. âyou really donât rest,â he murmured, voice low, a thread of concern tucked into his usual drawl, barely louder than the windâs sigh.
you didnât slow, sandals scuffing softly. ârest is for those who can afford carelessness.â
he huffed, almost amused, the sound soft as a falling petal. âremind me never to share my medical records with you.â
your lips twitched, a ghost of a smile, gone before it could settle.
silence returned, thrumming now, alive with something unspokenâfull, heavy with possibility, like a storm gathering just out of sight.
then you stopped.
he nearly bumped into you, catching himself with a soft inhale. you turned, gaze locking onto his, clear and unreadable, a spark of something sharp and startled flickering in your eyes. his breath hitched, chest tightening with a feeling he didnât dare name.
no script existed for this. no smirking quip, no practiced tease. just a slow, swelling pause, the world narrowing to the space between you.
he leaned inânot a game, not a performanceâraw, unguarded, his heart a traitor beating too loud.
his hand lifted, trembling faintly, hovering near your cheek as if afraid to shatter the moment. his eyes searched yours, seeking permission, a sign, anything to stop him.
you gave none.
so he kissed you.
softly at first, reverent, lips brushing yours with the care of someone handling porcelain. his mouth was warm, unsure but honest, and your breath caughtâa soft hitch he felt and paused for. his eyes fluttered half-shut, lashes long and pale, his silver hair swaying slightly as he leaned in further.
your lips parted, startled but not retreating, your fingers curling tight at your sides. his hand found your jaw, slow and sure, thumb grazing your cheekbone like heâd memorized it. he tilted his head slightly, shadows shifting along his high cheekbones, his breath mixing with yours. your heart thudded, loud in your throat.
you tilted up, just enough, your mouth moving under hisâtentative, then firmer, a quiet answer. the moment bloomed between you, the stillness of the air broken only by the soft brush of silk against silk, the distant sound of wind chimes trembling in the garden. satoru forgot how to think. his mind emptied, breath stolen. the world dissolved into the warmth of your breath, the taste of crushed herbs on your lips, and something sweeter beneath that made his chest ache.
he kissed you againâdeeper this time, less cautious, more aching. his hand slid from your jaw to the back of your neck, fingers threading into your hair, holding you there like a secret. his other hand, trembling, hovered at your waist before pulling you in by the small of your back. his lips parted, tongue brushing yours in a slow, exploratory sweep, reverent, like he was afraid to break you.
and you kissed him back.
not immediately, but when you didâit was real. your mouth opened to him, breath shaky, spine stiff but yielding. you leaned forward, just slightly, your hands still curled but not pushing. he tasted you like a prayer, like something sacred, like maybe if he kissed you long enough youâd stay.
then he pulled back, eyes dark and wide, pupils blown, lips red from the kiss. he looked at you as if he couldnât believe it had happened, as if the world had turned inside out and there you were, still in his arms.
âyouââ he breathed, voice hoarse, gaze flicking from your mouth to your eyes, dazed, lost, drunk on something he never thought he could have.
and then he kissed you again.
this time, hungry. this time, like a man stepping into fire knowing full well heâd burn. your lips met his with a gasp, and you let him take you for one heartbeat too long. one second too many.
your fingers twitched. your knees wavered. you wanted to hate him for how good it felt.
and thenâyou shoved him.
hard.
he stumbled backward, arms flailing like a heron skidding across ice, nearly tripping over the embroidered hem of his robe. he caught himself on a stone lantern with a grunt, robes fluttering around his ankles. his eyes were wide, lips still parted, chest rising and falling like heâd just run a mile.
âhave you lost your mind?â you snapped, voice like a blade. your cheeks blazed, your chest heaved, and your glareâgods, your glare could level dynasties.
he blinked, then grinned despite himself. crooked and boyish, maddeningly unrepentant.
âpossibly,â he said, breathless.
âiâm not wasting my genes on a eunuch,â you spat, your voice sharp as shattered jade. âno matter how pretty his face.â
satoru froze.
then blinked.
then let out a laugh. not one of those dramatic, hand-over-mouth princely chuckles he liked to use when causing a scene. no, this one was quiet, startledâundignified, even. a breath of disbelief that hiccuped past his lips and got swallowed by the wisteria.
âyou think iâm a eunuch,â he muttered, mostly to himself.
you didnât dignify him with an answer. nor did you stay to argue. didnât pause for a cutting remark or a dramatic glance over your shoulder. no, the moment he stilled, the moment that too-long silence fell between you like a dropped fan, you turned. spun on your heel and stormed off with the kind of pace that said if you didnât leave now, you might do something youâd regretâlike kiss him again. or worse: ask if he meant it.
which, of course, he did.
still, you muttered as you walked away. low and furious, under your breath, like the words were bubbling out whether you wanted them to or not. he caught fragments. something about hormones. about silk-robed maniacs with too many rings. about eunuchs, eggplants, and the gods forsaking your common sense.
the silence sank teeth into his shoulders. the night air folded around him like silk dipped in ice. his thumb grazed the edge of his bottom lip, slow, like he could rewind the last few seconds through touch alone.
he had forgotten.
forgotten what he was pretending to be. forgotten the rings, the incense, the mask heâd sewn into his skin over the years. he had kissed you like a manânot a prince, not a eunuch, not a myth wrapped in silk and riddles. just a man.
and you had kissed him back.
but the moment shattered before it could be named. your words had carved right through it. not cruelly, not intentionally. that was the worst part. you didnât know what youâd done. you hadnât even seen him.
you kissed the lie.
he pressed his hand to his mouth, jaw clenched. it was almost funny. it should have been funny. and maybe in the morning, it would be.
but right now?
right now, he was half-sick with the sweetness of it. with how close heâd come to believing that moment was real. with how much he still wanted it to be. the ache wasnât sharp, but it was deepâa bruise blooming slow beneath the ribs.
he should have laughed it off. he should have returned to his quarters, poured wine, told suguru something smug and unrepeatable. instead, he just stood there, dumb and dazed and smiling like an idiot.
âshe thinks iâm a eunuch,â he said again, quieter this time. and stillâstillâhe wanted you to kiss him again. not because you didnât know who he was.
but because, somehow, impossibly, you might want him anyway.
he didnât see you for three days.
not for lack of trying. you were a specter, slipping through locked doors, vanishing into sudden meetings, leaving maids shrugging when he pressed for your whereabouts. even the gossiping servants, usually eager to spill, offered nothing but vague apologies.
in court, he was a shadow of himself. during a trade council, he sat rigid, staring through a minister droning about tariffs, his fingers tracing the same spot on his lips where your kiss had burned.
the roomâs incense choked him, too sweet, and when a scribe dropped a brush, the clatter made him flinch, his thoughts snapping back to your startled shove. he nodded at the right moments, but his voice, usually sharp with quips, was dull, his eyes drifting to the window where moonlight mightâve been.
concubines noticed. one wept over a broken hairpin, its jade splintered like her heart, and satoru could only muster a tired, âitâs just a pin.â another sulked over a petty slightâsomeone had worn her shade of crimsonâand he waved her off, words flat: âwear blue instead.â their pouts deepened, but he had no energy for their dramas.
suguru found him sprawled on the pavilion roof, one arm flung across his eyes, the other tossing dried plums at passing sparrows, each throw more despondent than the last. âso,â suguru said, tossing him a rice cracker with no pity, âshe hit you with reality?â
âno,â satoru muttered, snapping the cracker in half with the mournful air of a man betrayed by fate. âshe pushed me. emotionally.â
suguruâs pause, mid-bite, was louder than words, his raised brow a silent judgment.
the worst part? satoru couldnât stop replaying it. the shape of your mouth against his, warm and yielding. the sharp twist of your face when you pulled back, eyes blazing with fury and something softer, unguarded.
a week passed. he performedâattended court, smiled on cue, offered wry commentary in meetings, even penned a birthday poem for the favored concubineâs pet nightingale, all wit and charm. but it was hollow.
in a session on border disputes, he doodled your name in the margin of a scroll, then scratched it out, ink smearing like his resolve. a concubine wailed about a lost fan, and he stared through her, muttering, âbuy another,â his voice a ghost of its usual spark.
every night, when the palace quieted, his steps led him back to the garden, to the spot where youâd stopped, where heâd leaned in, where the line between strategy and sincerity had dissolved. the wisteria was fading now, petals curling brown, and he stood there, moonlight pooling around him, hand drifting to his lips, still tingling.
the ache wasnât intrigue. wasnât curiosity.
it was wantâraw, relentless, refusing to fade.
and as he lingered, the irony gnawed deeper: heâd disguised himself as a eunuch to protect his life, only to lose his heart to a woman who thought he had none to give.
the problem began with a scream.
not yours.
hers.
lady mei, daughter of the insufferable minister of war, unleashed a shriek that couldâve cracked the palace jade, scattering birds from the rafters and jolting the court from their jasmine-laced tea. it ripped through the corridors like a war horn, shrill and self-important, drawing eyes and whispers like blood draws flies. by the time satoru caught the rumor, it had spread like ink in waterâravenous, unstoppable, vicious.
poison. hair falling in clumps.
dark magic, they hissed. foreign plots. a witch.
and youâgods, youâstood accused before the tribunal, chin high, jaw forged in iron, wrists bound in red silk that chafed raw welts into your skin. your robe sagged, one sleeve torn where a guardâs grip had twisted too hard, but you didnât flinch. your lips were a tight slash, face a mask, yet your eyes blazedâdefiant, untamed, a storm caged in flesh.
satoru overheard it by chance. or fate. call it what you will.
heâd been pacing the eastern promenade, robe loose at the throat, hair tied with reckless grace, his posture a thin veneer of boredom. two servants lingered by the reflecting pool, their whispers sharp, gleeful, cutting through the spring air. âshe cursed lady meiâs beauty cream,â one breathed, eyes wide as lotus blooms.
âno,â the other hissed, leaning in, âa tonic. thins the blood. deadly in excess.â
satoruâs world snapped. his ears roared, a high, searing hum drowning all else. the gardenâs lattice blurred, its patterns bleeding like smeared ink. the koi pond burned too bright, the air choking despite the breeze.
his hands clenched, nails carving crescents into his palms, silk twisting in his fists. he spun, robes flaring like a tempest, the blue fabric cracking with each furious stride. court eunuchs scattered as he stormed past, their bows faltering, stunned by the raw fury radiating from him. the usual glint in his eyes was dead, replaced by something glacial, murderous.
suguru caught him at the tribunal wingâs threshold, breathless, hair tied back, sleeves rolled as if heâd sprinted from his post. âyour highness,â he hissed, seizing satoruâs arm in a grip that could bruise, âyou cannot barge in. your position. your disguise.â
satoruâs head turned, slow, deliberate, like a blade aligning for a strike. rage poured from him, white-hot, unyielding as a forge. âtheyâre going to execute her over lies,â he snarled, voice low, jagged, each word a shard of flint. âi wonât stand by.â
his body trembled, not with fear but with violence barely contained, his jaw locked so tight the muscle twitched near his ear. his eyes burned beneath his white hair, colder than a winterâs edge, promising devastation.
âthink strategically,â suguru urged, stepping in front, voice firm but pleading. âthis screams more than justice. it screams you.â
satoruâs breath caught, a sharp stutter. his lips parted, then clamped shut. a beat. another. he exhaled through his teeth, a hiss like a blade drawn from its sheath. âfine,â he bit out. âstrategy. but if they touch one hair on her headââ
âthey wonât,â suguru said, softer, his gaze tracing satoruâs face, seeing the fractures in his mask. âthey wonât.â
satoru didnât nod, didnât thank him. he turned, vanishing like a storm unleashed, not to brood but to burn.
he tore through the palace like a wraith on fire. scrolls ripped from shelves, bamboo frames splintering under his grip. records cracked open, pages scattering like ash. his movements were sharp, relentless, stripped of the lazy grace he once wore like a second skin.
servants stammered, spilling secrets under his stare, their voices quaking. he bribed, coerced, lied, threatenedâone steward nearly fainted when satoru leaned in, his smile all teeth, voice a silken blade: âcare to clarify?â
by midnight, his sleeves were rolled, white linen smudged with ink and soot, his hair fraying from countless rakes of his fingers, strands clinging to his sweat-slick neck. scrolls and witness names littered the lacquered table like battlefield wreckage, his voice raw from demanding testimony. lady meiâs handmaidens trembled under his questions, eyes darting like sparrows before a hawk.
her perfumer tried to flee, only to find satoru waiting by the storage room, leaning casually against the doorframe, voice like frost: ârunning somewhere?â
he summoned an outer court physician under a false name, tearing through ledgers with brutal precisionâred stamps, supplier lists, ingredient logsâuntil he found it.
mercury.
tucked in an imported skin tonicâs recipe, a whisper of silver in the fine print. enough to shed hair, to bleach skin, to kill in time. he held the vial to the candlelight, its liquid shifting like molten guilt, thick and treacherous. his reflection twisted in the glassâpale, wild-eyed, lips a grim slash, the boy whoâd kissed you burned away by rage.
the fury in him cooled, hardened, became something sharperâcertainty, cold and unyielding.
he didnât smile at first.
then he did. not the charming mask, not the courtierâs grin. this was jagged, raw, all teeth and shadow, a predatorâs bared edge.
because he had itâthe proof, the truth, the blade to cut you free. because no oneânot a spoiled heiress, not a scheming courtier, not a whisper cloaked in silkâwould touch you.
not while he still drew breath.
his rage didnât falter, didnât soften. it fueled him, a fire in his veins as he prepared to storm the tribunal with evidence in hand, the irony of his eunuch disguise a bitter sting. heâd hidden to save his life, only to find his life now hinged on saving yours.
the vial still sat in his palm when the sun began to rise.
dawn crept in, golden and soft, a cruel jest against the storm in his chestâtight, raw, ready to split at the seams. light spilled like syrup across the chaos of scrolls and vials strewn around him, glinting off ink-stained bamboo and glass, but nothing could dull the acid churning in his gut. he hadnât slept, hadnât sat, the night consumed by evidence and fury, leaving only the mercuryâs cold gleam and the certainty that if he didnât act, theyâd rip you from him.
he didnât change, just yanked his robe tighter, the pale silk creased from hours of pacing. his hair, tugged back with a frayed black ribbon, was crooked, strands escaping to cling to his sweat-damp neck. his movements were sharp, stripped of flourish, the mask of poise shattered by sleepless resolve.
he strode through the palace corridors with lethal purposeânot the slouch of a court eunuch, not the drawl of the royal fool they took him for. he moved as who he was: crown prince, predator, a blade honed and aimed. his steps struck the tiled floor like war drums, each echo a challenge.
no bowed head, no softened gazeâhis outer robe flared with every stride, stark against the morningâs glow seeping through latticed windows. officials turned, startled, as he stormed into the tribunal, a figure cloaked in silk and wrath, moonlit hair twisted high, eyes like shattered ice.
suguru trailed three paces behind, silent, jaw clenched tight enough to crack stone. he moved like a shadow, hand resting on his swordâs hiltânot for defense, but as if ready to drag satoru out if this went too far. his disapproval burned like a brand between them, unspoken but searing.
you were there.
kneeling, silent, spine rigid as jade. your robes were plain, hair hastily knotted, strands fraying against your neck. your wrists, unbound now, rested stiffly in your lap, fingers knotted white. your lips were a taut line, jaw locked, and your eyesâgods, your eyesâhad shifted. still clear, still fierce, but now laced with something new: calculation, suspicion, a blade-sharp wariness that hadnât been there before.
because youâd seen him enterânot as a servant, not as the eunuch youâd assumed, but as a man with too much power in his stride, too much steel in his voice, too much weight in how the court stilled. something didnât add up, and your gaze cut through him like a scalpel.
satoruâs eyes locked on yours. unwavering, unyielding.
for the first time, in all your barbed exchanges, he couldnât read you.
âlord satoru,â the minister of justice intoned, voice brittle as dried reeds, âyou were not summoned.â
âi rarely am,â satoru replied, smooth but icy, his smile a blade that didnât reach his eyes. âyet i arrive when it matters.â
he stepped forward, robes hissing across the floor like a drawn sword, and drew a lacquer boxâblack, polished, lethalâfrom his sleeve. âi trust the tribunal still cares for truth?â
he didnât wait for permission, didnât bow, didnât blink. his fingers, steady as stone, snapped the lid open.
inside: the vial, sealed, labeled, venomous.
âlady mei has been slathering mercury on her skin,â he said, voice clipped, cold as a winterâs edge. âan imported cream to bleach her complexion. overuse brings tremors, fatigue, hair loss.â he let the last word hang, sharp as a guillotine. âsymptoms unrelated to the apothecaryâs work.â
he turned to the panel, gaze unblinking, deliberate. âit wasnât her tincture that poisoned mei. it was meiâs own vanity.â
whispers erupted, spreading like mold. fans snapped shut, silk rustled, discomfort coiling through the court. ministers exchanged glances, some avoiding your eyes, others squirming under satoruâs stare.
âyour source?â the minister of justice asked, voice thinner now, authority fraying.
âher handmaidens. her perfumer. her personal effects.â satoru tilted his head, expression a mask of frost. âshall i list the ingredients by name or rank them by toxicity?â
suguruâs glare bored into his back, a silent warning, his tension a pulse in the air. satoru felt it, ignored it.
because the room shifted. your name slid off the pyre.
âthe tribunal finds no fault in the apothecaryâs conduct,â the minister of justice said, voice tight, reluctant. âcharges dismissed.â
you exhaled, a soft release, like youâd held your breath since the scream. your fingers flexed, chin lifted, but your gaze didnât softenânot for him.
satoruâs shoulders eased, just a fraction, the knot in his chest loosening. but relief was fleeting.
âhow convenient,â the minister of justice said, eyes narrowing, voice dripping with suspicion, âthat you know so much about a servantâs case. one might think you have a personal stake in this apothecary.â
satoru smiled, slow, calculated, a jagged edge of teeth. âknowledge is my trade.â
âvery well, your hiââ
the slip was a whisper, barely there. the silence that followed was a chasm. satoruâs gaze didnât flinch. suguruâs jaw ticked, a muscle jumping under his skin.
ââmaster satoru.â
and that was that.
the matter closed.
satoru turned, robes flaring like a stormâs wake, the lacquer box gripped tight, its edges biting his palm. no triumph warmed his chestâonly dread, heavy as iron, settling in his bones because heâd stormed in with fire in his veins and too much truth on his tongue.
suguru followed, wordless, his silence blistering, storm-browed and heavy. they didnât speak as they left the hall, didnât need toâsuguruâs disapproval was a blade at satoruâs back.
but just before satoru crossed the threshold, he turned.
just once.
just long enough to see you, still kneeling, still watching. your eyes werenât grateful. they were narrow, probing, a scalpel slicing through his facade.
and in that fleeting second, he breathedânot relief, not victory, but the hollow ache of knowing heâd saved you and damned himself.
you wouldnât thank him. youâd ask questionsâthe kind that could unravel his lie, his title, his heart.
and gods help him, heâd still do it again.
contrary to what he was expecting, you gave him nothingâthatâs the thing about silenceâsatoru feels it like a blade to the throat.
especially when itâs yours.
it hits him hardânot metaphorical, but literal, a sharp slap to the back of his head from his father the morning after the tribunal, in the locked imperial study where guards stood sentinel and the air reeked of bitter incense and sharper disappointment.
âhave you lost your senses?â the emperor snapped, voice a low rumble, the kind that precedes a stormâs break. âyou kindized your cover for the court apothecary. do you grasp the risk to everything weâve built? your coronation looms, and one slip could have the court tearing itself apart with questions.â
satoru stared at the floor, fists clenched, knuckles bone-white, jaw locked until his teeth ached. his ceremonial robe sagged, sash skewed, hair knotted with an ink-stained ribbon, the black fraying at the edges. âi did what was right,â he said, voice steady but tight, each word a stone dropped in defiance.
âyou did what was emotional,â his father countered, eyes piercing, seeing too much.
the worst part? he was right. no defense would sound like anything but a confession, so satoru swallowed it, the truth burning like bile.
now, days later, heâs chasing the one he risked it all for, and you wonât even look at him.
your silence is a weapon, surgical, precise. he feels it instantlyâthe way your shoulders tense when his voice spills into a room, a subtle flinch like youâre bracing for impact. your spine stiffens when he steps too close, a wall rising without a word. your gaze skims over him, light as a stone skipping water, never settling, never sinking. your hands freeze, as if expecting an unwanted touch, your face a perfect mask, blank and unyielding.
itâs not avoidance. itâs retreatâcalculated, deliberate, leaving nothing for him to grasp, not even your sharp-tongued barbs.
he first catches it in the herb garden, where youâre crouched among flowering angelica, sleeves rolled, fingers stained green, a smudge of pollen dusting your cheek like gold in the sunlight.
you glance up, startled, then pivot smoothly to the court physician beside you, words clipped, professional, before excusing yourself. you brush dirt from your hands, braid swinging like a snapped cord as you vanish around the corner, leaving the air colder, heavier.
satoru stands frozen, clutching a jar of honeyed lotus heâd meant to give you, its petals already curling, drooping like his hope. he followsâof course he does.
the next day, and the next, he trails you through corridors, across courtyards, into the inner palaceâs echoing hush. he memorizes the whisper of your sandals, the way your lips thin when he enters, how you wrap your arms tighter around yourself, even in the summerâs heat, as if shielding something fragile.
you donât insult him. donât banter. donât anything.
your greetings, when they come, are cold, formal, a blade pressed lightly to his throatâpolite, practiced, punishing. each one carves deeper than your sharpest quip ever could.
he corners you by the water jars one morning, after mapping your routes like a hunter. his robe is creased from rushing, a loose thread dangling from the sleeve, his hair half-falling from its tie, white tufts framing his temples. he clutches a sprig of purple gentianâregret, heâd learned, hoping youâd read it too.
âheyââ he starts, voice softer than he means.
you look through him, eyes empty, like heâs vapor, insignificant. then you step around, sandals hissing on stone, not rushing, not flinching, gaze fixed ahead, unreadable, distant. you leave him clutching a flower that feels heavier than it should, its petals bruising in his grip.
he staggers, heart lurching, chest hollow with disbelief. not because youâre coldâheâs endured worse. not because youâre sharpâheâs always craved that. but because youâve erased yourself from the game he loved losing. youâve left him swinging at shadows, and the absence of your fight is a wound he canât staunch.
by midday, he slinks into suguruâs quarters, dragging his feet like a scolded child, arms crossed tight as if they could hold his unraveling together. his sash is half-untied, a dark smudge on his collar from spilled ink he didnât bother to clean. he collapses onto a cushion, graceless as a felled tree, robe tangling at his ankles, a gentian petal stuck to his shoulder, wilted and sad.
âsheâs avoiding me,â he declares, voice heavy with the weight of a man mourning a war lost. his hair is a wreck, strands clinging to his neck, the petal fluttering to the floor like a final surrender.
suguru, buried in scrolls, raises a brow, unimpressed. âyes. i noticed.â
satoru flops back, one arm flung across his eyes like a tragic poet. âiâve been to the medicine hall four times today.â
âiâm sure they loved the interruption.â
âthey offered me a foot bath and begged me to leave.â
suguru hums, dry as dust. âreasonable.â
satoru peeks from under his sleeve, the gentian now a crumpled heap beside him. âwhy?â
suguru sets his brush down, pinching his nose like heâs bracing for a saga. âmaybe sheâs unnerved by how you stormed the tribunal to save her.â
satoru sits up, indignation flaring. âi couldnât let them execute her.â
âand that,â suguru says, voice flat, âis why sheâs dodging you.â
satoru scowls, raking both hands through his hair, worsening the chaos. âthatâs absurd. i saved her. she should be calling me brilliant, handsome, terrifyingly heroic.â
âshe should,â suguru says, bland, ���but instead, she sees you as a threat.â
âiâm not a threat,â satoru poutsâyes, pouts, lips jutting like a child denied sweets. âiâm charming.â
âyou kissed her,â suguru says, blunt as a hammer, âthen risked your identity to clear her name. you nearly exposed yourself in the tribunal. if thatâs charming, weâre reading different scrolls.â
satoru opens his mouth, then shuts it, the truth landing like a stone. he is dangerousânot to you, never to you, but in the way men are when they want too much, feel too much, when your name in your sharp-tongued cadence has become a rhythm he canât unhear.
maybe you saw itâthe depth of his care, the reckless edge of it. maybe you knew what it could cost in a palace where love is a weakness, where weakness is a death sentence. maybe thatâs why youâve gone silent, because youâve lived here long enough to know how quickly devotion becomes a noose.
and gods, it hurts.
no oneâs ever run from him like this, not with this quiet, cutting precision. heâd rather you scream, call him a peacock, mock his silk robesâanything but this silence, this absence that feels like farewell.
because heâs not ready to let you goânot when your kiss still burns his lips, not when heâd burn the palace down to keep you safe again.
the thing about denial is satoru is incredibly good at it.
heâs practically a master of delusionâan expert in selective optimism, an artisan in pretending everything is fine, especially when it very much isnât. itâs the first week of your silence, and heâs convinced this is a temporary misstep. a phase. a momentary lapse in your usually impeccable judgment that will surely pass.
surely.
he starts showing up in places he has no business being.
âoh! what a coincidence finding you here⌠in the herb garden⌠at dawn⌠when you always collect morning dew,â he says brightly one morning, attempting nonchalance. he leans far too casually against the wooden trellis, his outer robe slightly askew, strands of silver-white hair glinting with condensation from the early mist.
he even has the audacity to smile like he hasnât been pacing that path for the last half hour, waiting for you to arrive.
your back is to him. you donât flinch, but your hand pauses over the mint leaves for a beat too long before moving again. your fingers move with mechanical precision as you snip the stems, pile them into your basket, and keep your gaze locked firmly on the greenery in front of you.
you donât answer.
he stands awkwardly for another breath, then another, shifting from foot to foot, clearing his throat onceâtwiceâuntil you finally rise with your basket and brush past him with all the grace of a falling leaf that still manages to cut like a knife. your sleeve doesnât even brush his. your hair smells faintly of crushed basil and dried chrysanthemum, and the scent follows you as you walk away.
undeterred, satoru escalates.
he appears in the medicinal stores that afternoon, arms folded behind his back like he owns the place. which, in a roundabout way, he technically does. his hair is freshly tied back, his sleeves rolled precisely to the elbow like he might do something useful. heâs even wearing his softer silk robes, the ones he knows donât intimidate patients.
he produces a small pot from within his robe with the dramatic flourish of a magician mid-performance.
âa rare specimen from the southern provinces,â he announces, eyes sparkling. âwhite-tipped chrysanthemum. useful for calming fevers, clearing toxins, and healing broken hearts.â
he adds the last bit with a grin that slides a little crooked at the corners. lopsided. hopeful. a little pathetic.
you donât even look up at first. your hands continue grinding dried rhubarb root into powder, movements efficient, clinical. your brow is furrowed. thereâs a streak of ash under your eye from hours near the incense brazier, and your sleeves are dusted with crushed herbs. when you finally glance his way, itâs brief. dispassionate. two seconds of eye contact that make him feel like heâs been dissected and found wanting.
âi have twenty-two of these in the western cabinet,â you say, voice devoid of venom or warmth. âbut thank you for the⌠professional courtesy.â
your bow is precise. and then youâre gone. the hem of your robe whispers against the stone as you turn the corner without a single backward glance.
he stands there in the cool quiet, alone but for the chrysanthemum pot in his hands, which suddenly feels heavier than it should. the silence in the room hums louder now. it presses at the back of his skull. he sets the pot down on the nearest shelf and doesnât look at it again.
later, he finds himself slouched sideways across suguruâs low table, picking at the edge of a rice cracker he has no intention of eating. his forehead is pressed to the polished wood, arms sprawled out like heâs melting.
âsheâs just busy. itâs nothing personal,â he mumbles into the grain of the table.
suguru, who has been dealing with palace politics since before satoru could tie his sash properly, looks at him like heâs watching a fire burn too close to the curtains.
âbusy?â suguru echoes, his tone so dry it might as well be powdered bone.
satoru lifts his head a fraction, eyes shadowed under his bangs. âoverwhelmed,â he insists, sitting up and tossing the uneaten cracker onto the tray. âthe tribunal aftermath, new responsibilities, increased patient loadâsheâs under a lot of pressure.â
âyou stormed a tribunal to save her,â suguru interrupts, setting down his brush with pointed slowness.
âyes, but heroically,â satoru says, arms folding tighter around himself, like he can physically ward off the doubt creeping in. ânobly.â
suguruâs eyebrow rises. high. impossibly high. it might detach from his face and float away like a skeptical spirit.
âlook,â satoru mutters, shifting to lie on his back and drape an arm over his eyes like the protagonist of a particularly tragic play, âthis is just a bump. a weird, quiet, icy bump. iâve weathered worse. sheâll come around. she always does. sheâshe has to.â
he pauses.
âright?â
suguru doesnât answer. just watches him in silence, eyes narrowing with the kind of older-brother pity that makes satoru want to melt through the floor.
and then he sighs. a long, theatrical sigh that fails to lighten the weight in his chest. because heâs starting to realize this isnât just a bump.
this is a slow, cold freeze.
and youâre the one pulling the frost line farther back every time he gets close. the air between you grows thinner, colder, until every word he wants to say dies frozen on his tongue before it ever reaches you. and for the first time, heâs afraid that all the warmth in the world might not be enough to melt it.
the thing about desperation is it turns satoru into a mastermind of madness.
week two dawns, and your icy silence is a fortress his charm canât breach, so he pivots. he schemes. he crafts plans so absurd theyâd make court poets weep for their lost dignity. you canât be mad he saved youâimpossibleâso this is just a phase, a fleeting misstep heâll charm into oblivion.
his opening gambit? a theatrical ailment, served with flair.
âmy pulse races, i canât eat, and sleepâs a stranger,â he proclaims one morning, materializing at your workstation like a ghost draped in pale silk, robes pristine but hair gleaming as if he spent an hour brushing it to catch the dawnâs glow. he leans over your table, just close enough for his sleeve to graze a vial, voice dripping with mock woe. âalso, my palms sweat when i see⌠certain peopleâwhich is definitely not you!â
the apothecary hall hums with early light, golden rays slicing through lattice windows, casting woven shadows across stone. camphor and dried licorice root scent the air, sharp and heavy. junior assistants shuffle behind, sorting valerian and lotus pods, their murmurs a soft drone.
youâre a statue, unmoved, flipping a ledger page, ink brush scratching measurements with ruthless calm. âsounds like a minor imbalance,â you say, voice a blade, clean and cold. âchrysanthemum tea and more sleep.â
satoru gaspsâgasps, hand to chest, staggering back like your words are divine judgment. a pestle clatters from an assistantâs grip, a tea bowl teeters on a shelf, wobbling like his pride. ânone of that worked,â he insists, eyes wide, tragic. âitâs chronic. possibly terminal. i need daily checkups. twice daily, for⌠observation.â
you donât reply, just pluck a jar of calming ointment from a cabinet and set it on the tableâs edge with a thud, not sparing him a glance. he snatches it, clutching it like a sacred talisman, bowing with such reverence his hair spills forward, a silver curtain brushing the floor.
thatâs the spark.
what follows is a campaign satoru deems elegant, a symphony of strategy. in truth, itâs a farce teetering on lunacy.
he turns sleuth, all subtle inquiries and innocent smiles. he grills kitchen staff on your lunch habitsâbitter plum candies, you love them. he corners a laundry maid about your robesâsame deep indigo, always pressed. he charms couriers for your midday hauntsâwest pavilion, near the koi pond. harmless, he swears, just⌠research. he scribbles notes, tucked in his sleeve, scrawled between council dronings: tools right to left, hums odd rhythms, hates wasted ink.
heâs not stalking. heâs conducting a study, a meticulous survey of your existence.
âreconnaissance,â he mutters one afternoon, crouched behind a decorative screen in the infirmaryâs rear hall, wedged between a linen cart and a scroll of spleen meridians, half-unrolled like his dignity.
itâs a ritual now. daily excuses, each more brazen. a fan âdroppedâ near your herbs, its silk tassel suspiciously pristine. a scroll âforgottenâ on your desk, its contents a poem he swears isnât his. a combâhis personal seal carved deep, definitely not hisâleft by your inkstone. a pouch of dried dates, âslippedâ from his sleeve, suspiciously your favorite.
he times his returns perfectly, catching the flicker of annoyance in your eyes, the slow sigh as you spot his silhouette. your jaw tightens, lips purse, gaze narrows like youâre diagnosing a plague.
âoh, thank the heavens,â he says one afternoon, kneeling by your table, robes pooling like spilled moonlight, embroidery glinting in the sun. âi feared this comb lost forever.â
âthat comb is carved with your seal,â you deadpan, stirring crushed kudzu, steam curling around your face. âyouâre the only one here who uses that seal as inner palace manager.â
he gasps, hand to heart. âso it is mine. a miracle.â
assistants exchange glances. one chokes back a laugh, sleeve muffling the sound. anotherâs eyes roll so far they might never return. you just stir, unamused, the bowlâs steam hiding the twitch of your mouth.
suguru finds him later, crouched behind a silk screen in the medicine hallâs corner, half-veiled by pressure-point charts and an abandoned anatomy scroll.
satoruâs staring at you mixing tinctures, gaze soft as if youâre a rare painting or a storm breaking over mountains. your sleeves are rolled, ginger staining your fingers, brow furrowed as you test the liquidâs thickness. a stray hair slips free, brushing your cheek each time you lean, and he tracks it like a comet.
âare you⌠spying?â suguru asks, voice teetering between worry and exhaustion.
âreconnaissance,â satoru says, eyes never leaving you. âcompletely different.â
âhow?â
âitâs dignified.â
suguruâs sigh could topple empires. he walks away, leaving satoru to his vigil.
he stays, knees aching, drafts chilling his ankles, even as shift bells chime and servants pass with raised brows and whispered gossip. he canât stop. watching you workâyour precise hands, your quiet focusâis the only time the world feels right, the only time youâre close, even if you wonât see him.
your silence canât be anger, not when he saved you, not when he was your shield. itâs just⌠a phase. youâll crack, throw a barb, maybe hurl a vial at his head. heâd take it gladly.
heâll keep showing up, unavoidable, until your frost thaws or you snap.
because if heâs in your orbit, youâll have to see him eventuallyâright? right?
the thing about humiliation is satoru has no sense of it.
or maybe he feels it but buries it beneath stubborn vanity and desperate theatrics, draping it in silks and timed flourishes like a tragedian clutching a tattered script. heâs not wrongâyou canât be mad he saved youâso he barrels forward, undaunted, a peacock in a storm.
week three crashes in like summer monsoonsâheavy, unyielding, impossible to ignore. satoruâs antics scale to operatic madness, each act more brazen than the last.
it begins at a court ceremony, the air thick with incense curling like specters around bored officialsâ heads. sunlight seeps through high lattice windows, spilling gold across tiled floors, glinting off jade pins and silk fans fluttering like moth wings. courtiers murmur, voices low, while a servantâs dropped tray earns a hissed rebuke that echoes faintly.
you stand beside the inner palace physician, posture rigid, face a mask, eyes fixed forward, your refusal to see him sharper than any blade.
he notices. gods, he notices.
so he âcollapsesââclutching his chest, dropping to his knees with a choked gasp mid-chant, silk robes pooling like melted snow. the sacred hymn stumbles, a musicianâs brow arches, but the koto strings hum on. âweakness,â he rasps, voice cracking just enough to sell it, hand trembling as he sways. âsudden⌠overwhelmingâŚâ
you glide to him, linen rustling, herbal scent trailing like a faint curse. kneeling, you press two fingers to his wrist, jaw tight as iron. his pulse? steady as a war drum.
âyour hands are so healing,â he murmurs, lips parted, lashes low, a saintly look ruined by the smirk tugging his mouth.
you drop his wrist like itâs plague-ridden.
âget up,â you say, voice flat as slate.
he pouts. âbutââ
âup.â
he rises, brushing nonexistent dust from his robes, their shimmer catching the light like a winter lake, regal and utterly shameless.
it spirals from there.
next, the rash. âa mysterious affliction,â he whispers one afternoon, leaning in the apothecary doorway like heâs spilling state secrets. his robes are artfully mussed, a few silver hairs astray for effect, his seal as inner palace manager glinting on his belt. âin places too improper to show anyone else.â
you donât look up from your mortar, grinding ginseng with mechanical precision. âi trust your medical discretion,â he sighs, hand over heart, theatrical as a funeral ode.
you gesture for a eunuch assistant without a blink. satoru dismisses him in five minutes, claiming a âmiraculous recovery,â his grin brighter than the noon sun.
then, the hiccups. âthree days,â he tells a dubious herbalist, face grave between hiccups so staged they could headline a festival. âunprovoked. incurable.â they flare only when youâre near, vanishing the instant you leave. âhicâlady rin fainted in the greenhouseâhicâscandalousâhicâheat or a lover?âhicââ
you shove a pressure point chart his way and keep walking. he trails you, hiccuping like a deranged waterfowl, robes swishing in your wake.
he takes to hiding behind potted plantsâliteral, not figurative. you catch the glint of embroidered silk behind a jasmine bush near the treatment wing. it rustles. he sneezes. you donât pause. the gardeners are less forgiving; one finds a scarf snagged in a fig tree and mutters about cursed spirits with tacky taste.
a palace maid starts a betting pool on a parchment scrap behind the tea station. by midweek, court ladies wager on his next ailment: lunar migraines, aphrodisiac allergies, silence sensitivity. the tallyâs pinned to a beam, fluttering like a rebel flag.
suguru finds him one evening, propped against a doorframe outside the record room, squinting at his reflection in a polished bronze tea tray. âwhat are you doing?â suguru asks, voice flat as a stepped-on reed.
âfinding my best angle,â satoru says, tilting his chin, robes catching the lamplight like liquid frost. âthis sideâs devastating.â
âwhy?â
âsome of us care about aesthetics, suguru.â
suguru stares three heartbeats, then leaves without a word, sandals slapping stone. satoru sighs, adjusts his sleeve, rechecks the tray. the problem isnât his tacticsâclearly, itâs the lighting.
because you canât be furious. this is just a phase, a fleeting frost heâll melt with enough flair. heâll keep performing, unavoidable, until you laugh or snapâeitherâs a win.
the thing about pretending is the mask eventually cracks.
week four creeps in like a slow fogâdense, suffocating, clinging to satoruâs bones. his schemes, once fueled by giddy denial, turn brittle, their spark snuffed out. youâre not mad he saved youâsurely notâbut your silence is a void, and his antics no longer draw your gaze. still, he canât stop, even as the performance bleeds into something raw, something real.
he spends an afternoon perched in a tree outside your window, teetering on a gnarled branch not meant for a man in layered silk. robes bunch under his knees, snagging on rough bark, his personal seal as inner palace manager glinting at his waist. ceremonial hairpins clink with each shift, the branch groaning under his weight.
petals drift into his lap, mingling with dust and a bold beetle that crawls up his sleeve. he swats it, muttering, as sap drips onto his shoulder, staining the silk. birds mock him from above; a maid below stifles a giggle, scurrying off.
he stays for hours, legs numb, arms clutching the trunk, eyes fixed on the lanternâs warm flicker behind your rice paper screen. a breeze carries distant gossip, the clack of slippers, the faint crash of a dropped mortar from the apothecary wing. he dozes offâchin to chest, cheek mashed against bark, mouth slack, snoring softly, undignified. a sparrow shits on his sleeve and flees.
your window slides open, airing out the stale warmth. he jolts awake, flailing, a squawk escaping as he tumblesâa sprawl of silk and limbs hitting dew-soaked grass with a grunt that echoes through the courtyard. leaves tangle in his hair, a grass stain blooms on his shoulder, a twig juts from his sash. one robe sleeve hangs off, his hairpin crooked.
you stare down.
âi was inspecting landscaping,â he croaks, blinking up, voice raw, throat scraped from days of shouting your name. âroot systems. erosion. vital work.â
your eyes narrow. you slide the window shut, the woodâs soft thud louder than any rebuke.
his voice starts failing after that. he calls after youâacross training fields, past koi ponds, through garden pathsâfirst hopeful, then frantic, then ragged with need. his throat burns, words slurring, a dry cough haunting quiet moments, like his own body rebels. you never turn, not even when he trips over his sandals, voice cracking on your name.
âyouâre overworking yourself,â suguru says one morning, watching satoru prod a congealed pile of rice. the breakfast hall buzzesâteacups clink, servants weave with platters of dumplings and lotus rootâbut satoru sits still, a ghost in the chaos where he once shone. his robes sag, collar limp, sash half-tied, dark crescents bruising under his eyes. he hasnât slept, not truly, not in a way that heals.
âiâm fine,â he rasps, voice a brittle whisper, throat raw.
a thread frays from his sleeve, tugged absently for half an hour. a maid swaps his tea for honey water; it sits untouched, steam curling into nothing.
he stops performingânot by choice, but because his body betrays him. the court notices, their amused whispers turning wary. âcursed?â one mutters under the moon-viewing pavilionâs arch. âheartbreak,â an older consort replies, fan slow, knowing, âuntreatable by herbs.â
the betting pool withers; no one bets on a man breaking in plain sight.
a young court lady tries teasing him during a scroll signing, giggling about his missing sash. he looks through her, face blankânot cold, just gone. her smile fades, and she retreats, fan drooping.
the emperor summons him. the chamber reeks of aged wood and sandalwood, cicadas shrieking outside, a moth dancing near the lantern.
âyour distractions are⌠obvious,â the emperor says, voice mild over a porcelain cup of spiced tea. âhave you sworn to starve?â
satoru blinks slowly, words sinking in late. âiâm capable,â he says, voice fragile, unconvinced.
the emperor sighs, cup clinking softly. âsuguru, pinch him when he sighs.â
âgladly,â suguru mutters, already poised by the window.
he pinches satoru at the next council briefing. satoru yelps, startling a western envoy who drops his brush. âsorry,â satoru says, straightening, blinking fast, âmuscle spasm. stress. common.â
no one buys it, least of all him.
you pass him in the apothecary hall later, face blank, pace even, tray of powdered herbs in hand, fingers stained with crushed petals. your sleeve brushes his, a fleeting touch that stops his breath, his hand twitching, hoping for your gaze.
you donât look. not a flicker.
he wonders if heâs fading, if heâs a ghost you never truly saw.
the thing about hitting rock bottom is satoru drags props and a crowd with him.
by week five, even the imperial koi dodge him, one darting away when he slumps over the pond, sighing into its depths like a poet scorned. a servant mutters, âtalking to fish again?â
another hisses, âno, monologuing. thereâs a difference.â his antics swing from pitiful to deranged, depending on the hour and how close you are before he sneezes. palace staff whisper behind sleeves, watching a tragedy laced with farce unfold in real time.
it starts with rainâa relentless downpour soaking roof tiles, seeping into scroll rooms, turning courtyard stones slick as eel skin. it clings to bones, weighs hair, chills marrow. attendants scurry with parasols, eunuchs huddle under eaves, guards eye the sky, dreaming of indoor shifts. the head gardener slips twice, cursing weather gods with a rake in hand.
satoru lingers outside your quarters.
four hours.
he leans against a wooden post, a drenched statue of damp nobility and sniffles. rain beads on his jaw, dripping onto his robeâs collar, silver hair plastered to his cheekbones like wet silk threads. his soaked outer robe clings, transparent, revealing embroidered underlayers meant for court, not courtyards. his slippers squelch, squishing with each shift. he sneezes every five minutes, loud, pathetic, drawing glances from servants who now reroute entirely.
you open the doorânot from pity, but because maids are betting in the side hall, giggling: five minutes more? ten? the cook wagers candied ginger heâll faint; a laundress bets on a song; the steward swears he saw satoruâs eyelashes blink code.
you sigh, step inside, return with gloves and a cloth mask. your hairâs knotted tight, sleeves pinned, expression sharp enough to carve jade. he coughs, theatrical anguish. âyouâre treating me like iâm plague-ridden.â
âyou are plague-ridden,â you snap, gloves crackling as you seize his wrist, touch clinical, cold. his skinâs chilled, pulse steady despite his act.
he leans into your grip. you flick his forehead, precise as a dart.
he whines all day, mostly to suguru, who slumps in the physicianâs lounge, regretting every choice leading here. an unread scroll lies in his lap, herbal poultice stench thick in the air. outside, birds chirp, mocking the farce within.
âshe wore gloves, suguru,â satoru moans, swaddled in three blankets, sipping a garlic-laced brew that reeks of despair. his personal seal as inner palace manager dangles from his sash, glinting dully. âgloves. like iâm a festering toadstool.â
âyouâre feverish,â suguru says, eyes on his scroll. âyou are a toadstool.â
satoru gasps, rattling a tea set. an attendant flinches, a teacup teeters, caught by a mortified apprentice.
then, self-diagnoses. ânocturnal hemogoblins,â he declares one evening, bursting into your workroom, clutching his side, face pale from sleeplessness and a dusting of tragic powder. âitâs dire.â
you donât look up from your parchment. âyou mean hemoglobinemia.â
he beams. âyou spoke to me.â
you freeze, brush hovering, face souring like you bit a rotten plum. you resume writing, silent. he tallies seven words in his head, a victory he celebrates like a war won.
his ploys escalate. rare herbs appearâones you havenât seen since southern training, wrapped in silk not from palace stores, their earthy scent lingering in halls. he trails sandalwood one day, golden pollen the next, a perfumed cloud like incense smoke.
âfound this lying around,â he says, setting a saffron root sprig on your table, its crimson threads vibrant against wood.
you raise a brow. âsaffron root from the western isles⌠lying around?â
he shrugs, smile strained.
then, disaster. he brings a volatile herb youâve warned against, cradled in a velvet box like a jewel. within an hour, his face swellsâleft eye shut, lip ballooned, nose a vivid plum. âi feel⌠handsome,â he slurs, voice muffled.
you administer antidote with the weary air of someone resigned to fate, humming faintly, maybe to cope. your fingers are deft, grip firm, expression a blank wall. âwhereâd you get this?â you ask, spreading minty salve with a spatula reeking of despair.
âsources,â he wheezes.
that night, suguru catches him before a mirror tray, rehearsing lines like a doomed actor. a breeze lifts the corridorâs sheer curtain, a moth fluttering past.
âoh! fancy meeting you here, exactly where i knew youâd be!â satoru chirps, smoothing his robe, chin tilted for sincerityâlooking haggard instead. ânew hairpin? it suits you perfectly!â âyour humor theoryâs brilliant. also your face. mostly your face.â
suguru sighs, shoulders sagging under satoruâs folly. âgods save us,â he mutters. âheâs full peacock.â
satoru twirls a mugwort sprig, eyes glassy, grinning at his warped reflection. âsheâll talk tomorrow. i feel it.â
suguru doesnât argueânot when satoru looks like heâs praying to a deaf god.
because rock bottom isnât the end, not when you havenât looked at him. heâll keep performing, props and all, until you see him again.
the thing about spectacle is it spills beyond the stage, especially when youâre satoruâinner palace manager, supposedly useless eunuch, suspiciously well-connected, and now openly consulting marble lions for romance tips.
by week six, palace gossip sheds its humor. giggles behind perfumed fans turn to pity, whispers hushing as he enters, soft glances heavy with concern and secondhand shame. attendants quiet, kitchen staff wince at his approach. heâs no longer the flamboyant eccentric juggling concubine schedules, overseeing embroidery, delivering orchids with a bow. heâs a wilted ribbon snagged on your heel, trailing the apothecary who wonât spare him a glance.
the man who once danced through courtyards now stumbles into furniture, walks into half-shut doors, topples garden lanterns, eyes locked on you. youâre not mad he saved youâimpossibleâso this is just a phase, he tells himself, even as denial frays.
âi think iâve forgotten how to swallow,â he declares post-midday meal, voice grave, like heâs diagnosing his own doom. honeyed yam lingers in the air, courtiersâ fans rustling faintly outside in the spring heat.
you donât look up from your scroll, brush scratching ink. âthatâs a tragedy,â you say, dry as dust.
âwhat if itâs muscular or psychological? some stress-induced esophageal issue?â
âchew slowly. drink water.â
âbut what if i choke?â
âthen iâll have peace at last.â
he haunts formal events, a mournful specter five steps behind youâalways five, counted under his breath like a lifeline. âone, two, threeâdamn it,â he mutters, crashing into a eunuch with a hairpin tray when you veer past the lotus fountain. the clatter echoes, pins scattering like stars. three attendants scramble to clean it.
you donât pause.
his hair, once a silver crown, rebels, strands haloing unevenly, a jade pin perpetually crooked. his robes, once pristine, misbutton, sashes unraveling, trailing like a poetâs failed verse. heâs less courtier, more shipwreck, washed ashore after a botched love letter.
in the east garden, he slumps against a mossy lion statue, sighing so loud the gardener pauses, rake hovering, checking for wounds. âshould i go for subtle longing or theatrical suffering?â satoru asks the lion, squinting at its weathered snout. âbe honest.â
the lionâs silent. a maid stifles a snort, fleeing.
suguru finds him thereâagain. âare you talking to rocks now?â he asks, arms crossed.
âhe listens without judging,â satoru says, solemn.
âhe also doesnât talk back.â
âthatâs the appeal.â
satoruâs decline hits new lows. suguru catches him outside your quarters, face blank, as if willing himself into the stonework.
âyouâre groveling for scraps of her attention like a starving dog,â suguru says, voice sharp but steady.
satoruâs head snaps up, eyes flashing, lips jutting in a pout that could shame a spoiled child. âgroveling? me? the inner palace bends to my every whim! and soon the empire!â he huffs, crossing his arms, personal seal glinting at his waist. âiâm strategizing, suguru. strategizing! sheâs just too stubborn to see my brilliance yet.â
he stomps a foot, robe swishing petulantly, then jabs a finger at suguru. âand donât you dare call it groveling when iâm clearly executing a masterful campaign of devotion!â
suguru raises a brow, unmoved. âa campaign? you spent three hours yesterday faking heart palpitations just so sheâd take your pulse. then you begged for a recheck because âit might be irregular.ââ
âmy heart does race when sheâs near,â satoru says, chin high, though his voice wavers, petulance cracking. âthatâs a medical fact!â
âitâs called infatuation, your highness, not an emergency.â
âand that swallowing thing could happen to anyone,â satoru adds, puffing his chest, but his shoulders slump, the fight leaking out.
suguruâs gaze softens, concern replacing jest. âthis isnât sustainable, satoru. youâre the crown prince. this behaviorâitâs beneath you.â
satoru stiffens, petulance fading to a flicker of dread. âi know my place,â he says, but the lie tastes like ash, heavy on his tongue. his shoulders sag, bravado crumbling under the weight of his secret.
the emperor summons him that evening. the chamber glows dim, sandalwood incense crackling, its nostalgic scent thick in the stillness. tea steams untouched in a porcelain cup, its delicate aroma lost.
âyouâre not sleeping,â the emperor says, eyeing him over his teacup, voice calm, not accusatory.
âiâm fine,â satoru lies, sitting rigid, eyes shadowed, nails carving crescents into his palms. his sleeve bears an ink blot, smudged from hours hunched over pointless scrolls.
heâs not fine.
âwhoever she is,â the emperor says, pausing, gaze unreadable, âsheâs left a mark.â
both of them know who is his father referring to.
the thing about spiraling is you run out of masks to hide behind.
week seven slips in like damp airâsilent, heavy, inescapable. no corridor theatrics, no feverish wails, no ailments flung at your workspace. the palace corridors echo emptier, as if bracing for a storm. satoru stops performing, and the silence left screams louder than his boldest quip.
no giggling attendants trail him. no court ladies stage stumbles for his glance. he doesnât lurk by the apothecary hall, conjuring maladies. he watchesâfrom shadowed walkways, courtyards, corners where he can feign a passing errand. his eyes follow you, a silent question too raw to voice.
in court, his voice fades. once a spark in the dull churn of palace bureaucracy, now he speaks only when called, words brief, humor gone. no jabs at garish sashes, no quips to ease tense silences. he lets the quiet fester. when he skips sparring with the southern envoyâa woman who thrives on his banterâheads turn.
suguru notices, arms crossed in the council chamber, head tilted, eyes asking: whatâs happening?
the truth lies at your door.
before dawn, satoru leaves heliotrope bouquets at your thresholdâsmall purple blooms, fragile yet vivid, whispering devotion, unspoken love. not native, not in season, their existence defies reason.
he pulls stringsâhis authority as inner palace manager, his personal seal flashing in shadowed deals with garden masters and secret merchants. delivered under moonlight, wrapped in fine parchment, stems cut sharp, theyâre offerings to a shrine only he tends.
he never signs them, never speaks of them. he waitsâbehind a painted screen, a corridor curtain, close enough to see your fingers brush the petals. his breath catches. your face stays stone, but he sees: the pause, your fingertips lingering, the faint crease in your brow, swallowing a sigh.
each day, the bouquets grow intricateâheliotrope laced with silk one dawn, wrapped in medical gauze the next, paired with a scrawled line from a physicianâs text. the message roars, wordless.
palace staff whisper. some say a ghost leaves the flowersâwho rises before the fifth bell? others bet on a nobleâs secret suit. a concubine swears a fox spiritâs at work. guards step around the blooms, wary, reverent.
satoru says nothing, just watches, always watches.
at night, he haunts the moonlit gardenâwhere you kissed, where he fractured. barefoot, steps silent on stone, pale hair loose, catching moonlight like spun silver. he murmurs to the koi pond, half-hoping for answers. âshe doesnât hate me, does she?â he asks, voice a breath, hoarse.
suguru finds him there, again. âdoes she hate me, suguru?â satoru asks, raw, fraying.
suguru pauses, arms folded, gazing at the pondâs still surface, a breeze barely stirring it. âitâs not that simple.â
satoru exhales, shaky, slumping, rubbing his palm against his eye, exhaustion carving every line. âwhat did i do wrong? besides everything.â
he replays your voice, your teasing eye-rolls, how youâd answer his nonsense yet see him, real. now your toneâs cold, courteous as a bladeâs edge, eyes never landing. when he nears, your wall rises, unyielding.
in a corridor, maybe chance, maybe not, you nod politely. something breaks. âdonât worry,â he mutters, bitter, sharp, âi wonât keep you. i know you find me repulsive.â
you stop, head turning, confusion and guilt flickering, but heâs gone before you settle.
his mask flakesâslow, not sudden. he skips meals, nights blur sleepless, small slights spark fury. he snaps at a scribe for smudged ink, slams a door, cracking its frame, over a misfiled scroll. his hands shake reading reports you once marked with sharp notes.
âare you well, master satoru?â a junior physician asks, soft during rounds.
he smiles, too bright, too thin. ânever better.â
the court whispersâbehind screens, fansâabout his silence, his temper, his drift. the inner palace manager, once a dazzling oddity, fades. none suspect his crown prince bloodâonly suguru, the emperor, the chancellor, and chosen ministers know, their secret guarded tight. but they question his focus, his steadiness.
suguru hears itâevery murmur, every doubtâand watches his friend, the empireâs sharpest mind, the boy who made consorts laugh, unravel, thread by silver thread.
because spiraling starts quiet, until itâs a scream he canât voice.
the thing about shame is that it never arrives alone. it drags longing behind it like a train of silk, heavy and unyielding, and satoruâs learning fast that longing is a damn tyrant, bowing to no one, least of all him.
week eightâs been a fever dream of jagged edges, but now, in a corridor outside the emperorâs chambersâvermilion walls lacquered to a bloody sheen, sandalwood choking the air like incense gone sour, scrolls rustling behind paper screens like whispers of the dead, morning light slicing through lattice to scatter dust motes like ashâsatoru gojo is a wreck.
his robeâs crooked, one sleeve slipping, silver hair half-loose, sticking to his sweat-slick neck, dark crescents bruising under his eyes. his breath catches, raw, as regret gnaws his ribs, sharper since last weekâs bitter words. your silence, your averted eyes, the way you glide past like heâs a plague-riddled corpse you wonât bother to nameâitâs worse than your barbs, worse than fury. itâs absence, and itâs killing him.
you appear, a flicker of your silhouette against the screen, steps soft on the worn runner, scrolls clutched to your chest like a shield. your jawâs clenched, lips a tight slash, gaze fixed above his shoulder like heâs nothing, air. his heart stumbles, forgets how to beat. he moves too fast, too desperate, a man drowning.
âfancy seeing you here,â he says, breathless, slouching to fake nonchalance. itâs a lieâhis voice shakes, hands twisting in his sleeves, fingers knotting silk to hide the tremor. his eyes, bloodshot, cling to you, raw, pleading.
your face doesnât shift, cold as stone. âi need to pass,â you say, voice clipped, sharp as a bladeâs edge, stepping left.
ânot until you tell me what i did wrong,â he says, sliding into your path, shoulders hunching, robe swishing like a broken fan. his toneâs too raw, too sharp, betraying the ache clawing his chest.
âi have patients waiting.â you pivot right, scrolls creaking in your grip, knuckles pale.
âthey can wait longer.â the words cut, harder than he meant, and he sees itâa flicker in your eyes, anger or hurt, gone before he can name it. âwhy are you avoiding me?â
you move left. he mirrors. you shift right. heâs there. his robe flares in dramatic waves, a stage actor mid-meltdown, planting himself with the stubborn desperation of a man whoâs got nothing left to lose.
your lips press thinner, a muscle twitching in your jaw. âmove,â you say, low, a warning that could draw blood.
ânot until you look me in the eyes and say youâre just busy.â he drops his voice, rough, tilting his head to catch your gaze, breath unsteady, carrying a tremor of need.
you scoff, eyes dropping to the runnerâs frayed weave, and duck under his arm. âiâm not avoiding you,â you lie, voice snapping like brittle wood. âiâm simplyââ
âlook me in the eyes and say that again,â he demands, voice low, gravelly, arm bracing against the wall, caging you without touching. his sleeve hovers near you, trembling, silk brushing the air like a ghostâs touch.
you pivot. quick. a step to the side, a swerve meant to slide past him.
he steps with you.
you dart the other wayâheâs there too, like a mirror with better posture. you try a feint, then a fake-out, then a spin worthy of palace dancers. every time, he matches you beat for beat, fan flicking, robe swishing, like this was all a pre-choreographed tragedy staged just to annoy you.
âare youâare you blocking me for sport?â you hiss, ducking and weaving like a cat trying to escape a curtain.
âi consider it cardio,â he replies, far too pleased.
âyou are notââ you lunge leftâblocked. ââa door.â you spin rightâblocked. âyou areââ
he shifts again, one arm rising to lean against the opposite panel, successfully completing his transformation into the worldâs most aggravating, smugly-dressed wall.
âdamned peacock,â you mutter under your breath, your patience unraveling like a poorly tied sash.
he grins, all teeth and challenge. âis that panic?â
thenâfate, that cruel bastard, plays its hand. in his eagerness to perform one final smug pivot, satoru overcommits. his foot catches the embroidered hem of his robeâonce regal, now a treacherous coil of silk. a curse, sharp and scandalized, escapes him as his balance betrays him.
his arms flail like a bird startled mid-preen. he reachesâgrabs the only thing in reachâyou.
the world lurches.
youâre yanked forward in a graceless blur. scrolls burst from your sleeves like startled pigeons. your sandal skids. silk snaps. the floor rises.
you crash atop him, your knees bracketing his hips, robes tangled, your weight knocking the wind from his lungs. one hand braces on his chest, the otherâlands on his thigh, then slips higher, dragged by momentum and misfortuneâand then time stops.
your hand rests where no eunuchâs should be, pressing against the hard, pulsing truth of his lie. satoruâs eyes snap open, wide as moons, heart slamming, drowning the corridorâs hum, his pulse a wild drum in his throat.
you freeze, breath hitching, eyes widening in slow horror, pupils dilating until they swallow the light. your lips part, a faint gasp, your gaze locked on his lap, then flicking to his face, shock warring with disbelief. your fingers flex, instinctive, the slight pressure a spark that sets him ablaze, raw, unbearable.
his face ignites, crimson flooding ears to throat, sweat slicking his brow, matting his hair. shame burns like a pyre, but longingâeight weeks of it, festering, unspentâflares hotter, primal, coiling tight in his gut. his cock twitches under your hand, a traitor, throbbing, straining against silk, a humiliating pulse he canât stop, fed by your touch, your horrified stare.
he tries to speak, mouth opening, closing, a fish gasping on dry land. a sound escapesâhalf-whimper, half-choke, not human, raw with need and mortification, a plea he canât shape.
ây-youâreââ you start, voice a trembling whisper, hand jerking back like itâs burned, fingers curling into your palm, scrolls forgotten, scattered across the runner.
âlate for a meeting!â he yelps, pitch shattering, a glass-breaking wail. he scrambles up, nearly headbutting you, sleeves flailing in a whirlwind of panic. âas are you! very late! we should go! separately! you first! or me! both!â
he shoves himself upright, stumbles, one sandal half-off, toes catching the runner, and crashes into a lantern stand. it wobbles, brass clanging like a mocking gong; he mutters a frantic, âsorry, sorry,â to the metal, voice high, fraying.
heâs gone, fleeing down the corridor like deathâs on his heels, robe flapping, silver hair streaming like a cometâs tail. his footsteps echo, uneven, desperate, fading into the palaceâs hum, sandalwood trailing like a curse.
he doesnât stop until he hits the eastern wingâs darkest storage room, a crypt behind a forgotten pantry. dusty scrolls pile like forgotten sins, edges curling in stale, mildewed air. a broom slumps against a wall, bristles choked with cobwebs, spiderwebs veiling the corners, shimmering faintly in the gray sliver of light from a cracked window. the floorâs cold, gritty, biting his knees as he collapses, back slamming the door shut, sealing himself in.
his breath heaves, lungs raw, face buried in his hands, fingers digging into his scalp, tugging silver strands until his scalp stings, sweat dripping down his neck, pooling at his collarbone. shame scalds, a molten wave, but longingâweeks of your silence, your cold eyes, your absence carving him hollowâchokes him worse.
your touch, accidental, sears like a brand, your horrified gaze a knife twisting in his ribs. his cockâs still hard, painfully so, straining against his robe, a throbbing pulse that wonât relent, fed by every thought of you, every memory of your voice, your fire, your fleeting glance that once saw him whole.
he groans, low, broken, forehead pressed to his arm, cursing himself, you, the gods, the robe, the corridor, the whole damn world. his hand twitches, hovering over his lap, resisting, pleading, but the needâs a tyrant, born of eight weeksâ yearning, your sharp tongue, your gaze that cut him alive, your silence that breaks him now. he surrenders, fingers fumbling, shoving silk layers aside, fabric scraping his fevered skin, cool air hitting the heat of his flesh like a slap.
he frees himself, cock heavy, swollen, tip slick with precum that glistens in the dim light, dripping down his shaft, a shameful bead that pools on the gritty floor. he grips himself, a hiss escaping through clenched teeth, the contact a jolt that makes his hips jerk, his breath catching like a sob, raw and ragged. itâs not lustâitâs longing, raw, bleeding, for your eyes that once saw him, your barbs that cut him alive, your touch that burned through his lies.
he strokes, slow, punishing, hand tight, calluses from a hidden sword scraping sensitive skin, each slide dragging a moan, chest heaving, sweat matting his hair to his flushed cheeks, silver strands plastered across his brow, his throat bared as his head tips back, veins pulsing under sweat-slick skin.
he pictures youâyour wide eyes, shocked, lips parting as you fell atop him, robe clinging to your frame, the faint herb scent on your skin, sharp and clean. he imagines your breath on his neck, your fingers deliberate, curling around him, guiding him, your voice whispering his name, not in horror but want, low and rough like it was in his dreams.
his strokes quicken, desperate, slick with precum, the wet sound obscene, echoing off dusty scrolls, bouncing in the stale air. his free hand claws the floor, nails scraping grit, fingers digging into cold stone, seeking an anchor as his body shakes, hips bucking into his fist, rhythm frantic, no control left, only need.
his moans spill, raw, unfiltered, bouncing off the walls, a litany of broken sounds. âfuck,â he gasps, voice shattering, âwhy you?â itâs your absence, your fire, the way you looked at him once, like he was real, now a ghost he chases.
his hand moves faster, rougher, slick and relentless, each stroke a plea for you to see him, to cut him again with your gaze. âplease,â he whispers, to you, to nothing, âjust look at me.â his vision blurs, tears or sweat, he canât tell, heat coiling low, a knot tightening, pulling, until it snaps like a bowstring.
he comes hard, a shudder tearing through him, spine arching, hips jerking as he spills over his hand, thick, hot, splattering the gritty floor, staining his robeâs hem, a shameful mark that burns his eyes. his moanâs a broken cry, half your name, half a curse, echoing in the crypt-like room, jagged, raw, filling the air until it chokes him.
he collapses, sprawled across dusty linens, chest heaving, eyes wide, staring at the cracked ceiling, its fissures mirroring his fractured mind. his handâs still wrapped around himself, slick, trembling, aftershocks fading into a hollow ache, longing unspent, pooling in his gut like poison, heavy, unyielding.
he lies there, time blurring, mildewâs scent thicker now, mingling with his sweat and release, air suffocating, pressing his chest. his hairâs plastered to his face, silver strands streaking his flushed cheeks, robe a tangled wreck, one sleeve torn, another inside-out, silk clinging to his sweat-soaked skin. heâs gutted, undone by his own hand, your touch a memory he canât unmake, your horrified eyes a wound he canât close, bleeding him dry.
later, he emerges, robe barely tied, one sleeve dangling, hair damp at the temples, flushed like heâs wrestled a demon and lost. his steps falter, sandals scuffing stone, smile forced, brittle, not touching his bloodshot eyes, dark crescents bruising beneath, cheekbones sharp from skipped meals, skin pale as moonlight gone wrong.
suguru passes him, dark robe pristine, pausing mid-step. âyou look like you fought an assassin,â he says, flat, one brow lifting, eyes scanning satoruâs ruinâflushed skin, trembling fingers, sweat-slick hair matted to his neck.
âcalisthenics,â satoru chirps, too bright, voice cracking, a pitch too high. âfantastic for circulation.â
suguruâs eyes narrow, lingering on the rumpled robe, the damp hair, the faint bruise on satoruâs knuckles from clawing the floor. âcirculation,â he repeats, slow, heavy with doubt, like he smells the lie and the shame beneath it.
satoru hurries off, pace quick, like heâs fleeing a fire he set. his robe flutters, misaligned, dragonâs tail mocking him with every step. he doesnât dare picture your face, your hand, your horrorânot again.
heâs considering faking his death. or switching identities. exile in a fishing village sounds appealing.
(give him two hours. maybe three.)
a/n: LMAO pls donât mind part one ending here. as i said this is meant to be a oneshot only đ§đťââď¸
taglist: @n1vi @victoria1676 @rannie-16 @satokitten @fwgojos @sanestsanstan @satorusbabyy @simplymygojo @ch0cocat1207 @fancypeacepersona @yamadramallamaqueen @iamrgo @cuntysaurusrex @blushedcheri @achildofaphrodite @yourgirljasmine5 @mrscarletellaswife @satorupi @dayeeter @lovelyreaderlovesreadingromance @mo0sin @erens-heart @slutlight2ndver @yutazure @luvvcho @eolivy @se-phi-roth @gojowifefrfr @00anymous00 @peachysweet-mwah @heyl820 @uhhellnogetoffpleasenowty @weewoowongachimichanga @ssetsuka @etsuniiru @ehcilhc @synapsis @michi7w7 @perqbeth @viclike @shocum @saitamaswifey @dizzyyyy0 @c43rr13s @faeiseavv @beereadzzz @jkslaugh97 @wise-fangirl @tu-tusii @applepi405
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sylus is sitting alone in his living room, relaxed on his favorite black leather sofa. heâs absentmindedly scrolling through his phone, just taking a break. and you; youâre getting all dressed up for a girlâs night out, adding some finishing touches to your hair and makeup. once youâre satisfied with your appearance, you head out of your room to bid sylus adieu. your heels clack sharply on the marble living room floor as you approach him silently from behind.
âkitten,â he calls out. âis that you?â
âmmmhmm,â you hum, reaching over the back of the furniture to rest your arms on his broad shoulders. âiâm going out for a bit mâkay?â you lean over to gently press a kiss on the nape his neck.
âlet me see how pretty you look before you go,â sylus grins sheepishly, reaching out for your palm so that he can guide you. still holding his hand, you step around the arm of the sofa, positioning yourself so that he can observe you fully. you do a cute little twirl in front of him so that he can see the back, too. taking in the view of your gorgeous body and your chosen outfit for the night, his jaw tightensâjust a bit. he pulls at the hem of your dress, looking up at you with those dark eyes of his.
âsweetie, this is quite⌠revealing, isnât it?â his voice trails off, and he lets his eyes wander over the top of your dress, which pushes your breasts up, making them appear fuller than usual. heâs baffled at the lack of fabric, but manages to maintain a steely expression.
âyeah, i wanted to try something new. i quite like it,â you perk up, oblivious to his discontent.
âdearest, if you go out wearing this tiny thing youâll only end up flashing someone,â he lifts your wrist, nibbling at it.
âsylus!â you blush. âall of my friends dress like this when we go out. itâs in style, but I wouldnât expect you to know anything about that,â you sneer.
âoh reallyâŚ?â he ignores your jab. âdo you find it stylish to go out half naked?â
before you can let out a sarcastic reply, sylus raises from his seat, towering over you as you look up at him through mascara-coated lashes. he reaches for your hand again, kissing it gingerly.
âstay, wonât you? donât make me beg.â he whispers ever so quietly, soft lips brushing up against your ear. âi donât want other men to see this much of whatâs mine,â he purrs, wrapping his hand around your neck almost subconsciouslyâlike it belongs there.
âbâbut, I promised my friendsââ you stammer, embarrassed at how quickly sylus manages to fluster you at times like this.
âjust think about how much fun the two of us could get up to,â he smiles at you, mischievous as ever.
and thatâs all it takesâitâs not like you needed much persuading, anyways. sylus drops to his knees, bunching up the skirt of your dress over your hips so that he can press hungry kisses against your belly. he kisses all the way down to your inner thigh, teasing you exactly how you like it, exactly how heâs memorized it. âsylusâŚâ you whine as the corners of your lip turn down.
âpull my hair if itâs too much,â sylus grins up at you, pleased at himself for getting you exactly where he wants.
âand go ahead and tell your friends you wonât be able to make it tonight.â
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April Showers Bring May Flowers [Sylus + Daughter â
2090 words â
Masterlist â
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AO3] It was raining again in the N109 Zone. A/N: Sylusâ birthday may be over, but I still had a few people requesting a birthday fic with his daughter, so⌠I said yes. :â) Tag list: @lavlynyan @alfredosaws @solifloris @nezuswritingdesk @valkyyriia @yes-no-maybe-soo @natimiles @yourlocalcatscammer @callilypso @likewhyareyousoobsessedwithme @qyuin @sylusfluffymeow @asiaticapple @rainbowsnowflake @littleapplle ă request to be added ă
It was raining again in the N109 Zone, as it always seemed to do come April. It had never bothered Sylus too much, feeling like the rain was cleansing the world of its impurities. God only knew how sinfully infested this nigh eternally dark insidious city he had claimed as his home was. In every dark corner, within the shadows, under the cloak of this endless nighttime, unspeakable criminal acts occurred, a common knowledge among the citizens of this city, but everyone turned a blind eye away unless they wished to also meet an early end.
As Sylus exited his car, returning to Onychinusâ base, his mind was already forgetting the earlier âbusinessâ he had to deal with. Another betrayalâan imperfect ambushâanother foolish attempt to overthrow him, but as all of the previous attempts on his life, he had handled them with ease, letting his traitorous attackers have their moment of egotistical superiority before he had shown them who was truly higher on the food chain.
To some, it would be so lonely at the top, and perhaps, for years Sylus had truly felt this way as well, though of course, he had never let his mind lingered on those feelings or ever acknowledging them. Not out of pride, or any similar reasons of sorts, but rather there was nothing to be gained from stewing in such trivial thoughts or allowing such feelings to loiter and occupy his headspace.
As the seasons passed, coming and going, the years rolling by, he had left those lonely feelings behind, his world shifting the moment he had found you back in his life again.
The weight of his wedding ring felt just right on his finger, your touch still lingering though it had been years and years since you had guided the band to him, promising your life and love to him evermore. Sylus had always known having you alone was a true blessing he had been missing, but he realized he was wrong in a way because the day his daughter was born, she had secured her place within his heart, her hold on him more steadfast than she would ever realize.
She was the true blessing in his life.
âWhat is this?â Sylus sighed in amusement, finding himself stopping short of his study and seeing a familiar small figure curled outside his door, clutching a dark-colored dino plushie in her arms. He walked over, bending down to scoop his three-year-old daughter into his arms.
âWhy did you fall asleep out here again, my little birdie?â he asked gently to the sleeping girl, letting her head rest on his shoulder. In that moment, her arms loosened and her plushie fell to the floor.
Noticing this, Sylus bent down to pick up the plushie. He scrutinized the little plushie in his hand, noticing it looked different from the ones his daughter owned. As he examined it, he noticed a heavy weight within the plushie, as if it carried another object inside its body. Curious, he gave a gentle squeeze, his laughter immediate when he realized there was a voice box inside the moment he heard your recorded voice speaking:
âOkay, baby, do you remember the words?â
âYes, Mommy! Happââ
âHold on, hold on,â your laughter rang out as you stopped the eager toddler from continuing, telling her gently, âLet Mommy play the music first.â
Sylusâ breathing stopped for a second, hearing a familiar melody. It had only become something of a tradition in his life since that day you had taken him to that wildlife park, where after a day of exploration, he and you had a special moment within a forest of maple trees where you first sang him âHappy Birthday,â not realizing until he confessed that you were the first to do so for him.
In years to come, you remained the one to sing to himâaside from Luke and Kieran occasionally, as wellâbut only in just the last two years, you had a new person who had joined you in this tradition, her excitement for this day always stronger than the previous as she had grown older and understood the importance of it.
Sylusâ expression unwittingly softened further as he listened to the recording.
âTogether with Mommy now,â you had told the child.
Sylus smiled as he heard your beautiful voice joined by your daughterâs sweet lilt, the blended harmony chasing away all of his stress and unease. He had never heard a lovelier sound than hearing his wife and daughter singing to him:
âHappy birthday to you / Happy birthday to you / Happy birthday, dear Daddy / Happy birthday to you~!â
âMommy?â he heard his daughterâs recorded voice speaking after the songâs immediate end, âWill Daddy like my singing?â
âHe adores your singing,â your voice answered firmly. âHe loves you so much.â
There was that sweet bell-like giggle Sylus loved hearing from his daughter, and then her voice brightly chiming: âI love Daddy, too! Daddy, Daddy, I love you so, so, so much! Happy birthday!â
The recording stopped and Sylus peered at the sleeping girl in his arms. He nuzzled his cheek against her head, whispering softly, âThank you.â
âIt was supposed to be a surprise for when you wake up later.â
Sylus looked up, seeing you coming from down the hallway with a light crimson robe over the night slip you were wearing. He smiled at your faux look of exasperation as you approached him.
âI was wondering what happened to this plushie,â you mused, smiling when Sylus bent down to greet you with a brief kiss on the lips. âAnd this little birdie. I was so sure I had tucked her into her bed hours agoââ
You paused, noticing Sylusâ appearance showed that he had been in a scuffle, to put it lightly. You frowned, but before you could voice your concerns, he reassured you gently with another kiss, already leading you back to the master bedroom.
âWait,â you spoke up, gesturing to your sleeping daughter. âShouldnât we put her back to bed first?â
Sylus smiled. âSheâs not letting go of me,â he said with feigned helplessness. âShe has her little dino claws gripping my shirt so tightly.â
You smiled back, picking up on his sentiments. âAh,â you said with a teasing lilt, âIs this big intimidating dragon so helpless against this itty bitty one?â
Sylus sighed dramatically. âShe is truly a force to be reckon with, Miss Hunter,â he said, matching your playfulness. He opened the door to both of your bedroom and led you to your bed.
You watched as your husband pried your daughterâs little fingers from his shirt and passed her and the plushie over to you.
âIâll be back in a moment,â he said, disappearing to the bathroom for a quick shower. Within minutes, you heard the sound of the shower running, catching a glimpse of the steams fogging up the semi-translucent door.
The sounds of the rain seemed louder now, hearing the droplets hitting the floor-to-ceiling windows with much more force than earlier. You reclined back against some pillows, letting your sleeping daughter rest on your chest, your fingers instinctively threading through her hair as you hummed a gentle lullaby for her.
You smiled at the obsidian-colored dino plushie next to you that was wearing a crimson bowtie that matched its eyes. When your daughter had expressed her wish to give her father a birthday song from her he could always hear whenever he wanted, you had spent some time pondering how to execute this charming little idea.
When you remembered the custom crow plushie Sylus had gifted you so long ago, the plan quickly fell into place. What a full-circle moment, you had mused, delighting in planning a customized dino plushie to gift him back in return years later.
Suddenly, you heard a chuckle a short distance away. It was quickly followed by Sylusâ deep rich voice breaking through your thoughts, âWhatâs going on through that head of yours that is making you smile so much?â
He climbed into bed next to you with still damped hair and water droplets landing on his burgundy robe. His eyebrow lifted up at the sight of the birthday plushie nestled by your side, acting almost as a barrier between you both. He picked it up, giving a gentle squeeze and hearing that recorded conversation and song again.
âLook at your smile,â you teased him, reaching over to poke his cheek while still mindful of the sleeping toddler on your chest. âYou look like a dragon delighting in his new treasure.â
âPerhaps because that is the case,â he countered back lightheartedly. You nearly laughed as he hugged the plushie against his chest before setting it to the side, commenting, âI wasnât expecting such a⌠charming little gift as this.â
âIt was her idea,â you told him proudly.
He chuckled. âIs that so? I have to safeguard this even more then.â
âWhat would people say if they knew Onychinusâ leader most treasured gift is a little plushie?â
âTheir assumption would be incorrect then,â he retorted to your surprise.
He pulled both you and your daughter into his embrace, taking the little girl from your arms and letting her rest against him. Within his arms, you felt that familiar warmth that was a welcoming comfort against the chill of this rainy April night. You nuzzled against him, smiling as his large hand rubbed your arm up and down soothingly.
âYou two are my treasures,â he clarified, pressing another kiss to the top of your head.
Before you could respond, you heard a little yawn, catching sight of your daughterâs sleepy little eyes opening briefly.
âDaddy?â you both heard the toddlerâs small voice speaking up.
âIâm here, baby,â Sylus answered back affectionately, his crimson eyes twinkling with so much adoration for the little girl.
The toddler yawned again, rubbing her eyes tiredly. âHa-happy birthday, DaddyâŚâ
Sylus kissed her temple. âThank you, my sweet little birdie,â he whispered with another fond smile, seeing his daughter nuzzled against his chest as she drifted back to sleep, her small hand grasped the front of her fatherâs robe, fingers unconsciously rubbing the silk material in comfort. With the loving and protective presences of both her parents near, the toddler drifted into a deeper slumber than earlier, her dreams now sweeter and more cherished.
You peered up at Sylus, touched by such a sweet sight between father and daughter. âHappy birthday, my beloved.â
The gaze he returned to you, full of happiness and peace, made your heart stirred with a desire to always safeguard this part of him, to always be the warmth and light in his world such as he had always been for you and your daughter.
The downpour over the N109 Zone continued, and though Sylus knew no actual flowers would ever bloom within this area, it still felt like spring had arrived in a different way. With each new year, after every birthday since that first one at the wildlife park, he had grown greedier, wanting to hold onto this happiness he had acquired possessively and never let it slipped away from his grasp.
No fiend would ever know of such greed as this until they have acquired the love and happiness Sylus had.
âThank you, my beloved,â he answered back, holding you just a bit tighter, noticeably longer, and ever lovingly and protectively as true as he had always been with you. You returned his embrace, your own greed just as insatiable as his.
Sylus laid you down next to him, your daughter sleeping in between curled up to his chest. You reached across, touching his cheek, and asked, âIs your birthday wish still the same as before?â
He rested his hand over yours on his cheek, his gentle smile reflected in your eyes.
âAs long as you and her,â his said, his eyes glancing quickly at the sleeping girl between you both, âlive freely and brilliantly, you will both be the very reasons for my strength and my vulnerability. I do not desire anything else, for this is enough.â
In that moment, you wondered which was louder: the rain or your heartbeat? Sylus was always resolute with his decisions, and this decisiveness and honesty were just a few reasons out of many for why you loved him as deeply as you did.
âHappy birthday, Sylusâ you repeated, smiling fondly when he guided your fingers to his lips, answering your affections with his own.
And to many more, my dearly beloved.
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Imagine Sylus standing by the hospital crib, arms frozen at his sides, eyes locked on the tiny bundle swaddled in white. The nurses keep asking if he wants to hold the baby, but he just... stands there. Silent. Unmoving.
Because he's scared.
Scared that his handsâhands that have drawn blood, broken bones, held guns and knives, will somehow ruin this pure little being. That even touching them would be some kind of sinful contamination.
Heâs done so much wrong. Hurt so many people. He never thought he deserved you, let alone a child.
But then the baby opens their eyes.
Ruby red. Just like his.
It knocks the breath from his lungs. Heâs never seen anything so small, so perfectâand to think they carry a part of him? Itâs almost unbearable.
The nurse gently places the baby in his arms, and Sylus panics, even then. He holds them like theyâre made of glass, as if one wrong move will cause the heavens to shatter.
He has been handed rare jewels, precious ores, and materials worth millions over the course of his life. But nothingânothingâhas ever compared to the weight of his precious baby being placed into his arms.
Because this? This is priceless.
And despite his anxiety, the baby just... coos. Nuzzles into his chest. Like they know him. Like they trust him.
And suddenly, the walls around his heart crumble.
The infamous Onychinus leader, feared across cities and whispered about like a living nightmareâheâs crying. Silently. Reverently.
He didnât know love like this existed. He thought he gave you everything. Every bit of softness he had left.
But now?
Now he knows, his heart had one more piece to give.
And it was always meant for them.
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SNOWCROW UNI AU DUMP!!
all of these are reposts from my twitter, and some never seen before doodles :p ive got so many brain rot for this au but i dont have the time to draw them with me being a uni student myself, so i'll use this as an outlet to yap
ofc yes snowcrow are roomies duhhhh. the other boys are included as well but its primarily focused on snowcrow. both of them are nerds, sy just doesnt fit in the stereotype appearance wise. he also rarely leaves his room (bc hes in IT) so hes mostly wearing nothing but his optimus prime boxers. zayne has 5 outfits maximum and repeats the same ones depending on the day, and its either a collared button up shirt or a hoodie. all his pants are identical except for one pair of jeans he wears for special occasions aka going to the mall
in this au, zayne's autism shines more. he's more clumsy and awkward and doesnt get social cue. naive at some times, ESPECIALLY when it comes to ppl tryna hit on him. sy is less macho suave here, chillaxed in a teen core way and an idrgaf attitude. much more of a loser too. and more immature (in comparison to his canon self)
their dorm room: a disaster. its a 2 pax room so both their beds are singles across from each other. only two weeks into the semester sy's space is already full of his stuff to the point he cant even sleep on his bed. robot stuff from his club, personal collection of trinkets and other stuff he COULD throw out but doesnt want to bc he's a hoarder. so now he either sleeps on the floor or on zayne's bed. usually on zayne's bed when he's out for class during day time since his own classes are at night. zayne didnt mind but it meant sy owes him so sy buys him a lot of stuff especially sweet treats and mixue. he also has to drive him everywhere on his motorcycle. "i wanna go to that dessert shop" "you mean the one thats deep in the city full of traffic and hidden in between the alleyways where u have to go through the 7 layers of hell for parking?" "yes" "..................kay."
pets!! sy had mephisto even before entering uni. then later adopted a bearded dragon named bartholomew, mew or bartie for short. zayne took in a stray black cat from the streets. cats rarely like him so when this one didnt run away, immediate adoption. claudius galenus is his name after a greek philosopher, galen for short. obv sy made fun of his name choices, but then again he named a bird after the devil and a reptile "bartholomew". theyre both idiots. sy also enjoys finding random geckos or lizards, and frogs, and snakes. he'd probably own a scarab too. but zayne never allowed those bc galen is a gluttonous hell spawn and eats everything. at one point he started chewing on sy's mattress. no, pets are not allowed in dorms. they got off with a warning the first time. so every time theres even a hint of a spontaneous dorm check, sy asks his mom to babysit their kids. his mom being the sweetheart she is helped them out, though she wondered if her son will ever grow up and be at least acceptable in a professional setting bc she cant imagine him having a corporate career with the way he is now.
money. zayne has a scholarship and during their dorm year, it was easy to live on. he didnt have many assignments that needed money to be spent on, and he was never the shopping type, for clothes or other stuff he cant eat anyways. but ever since they moved out to rent an apartment, money got tighter. sure both his parents are doctors and has no problem giving him extra pocket money, but he prefers to not burden them. so he now he part times at a vet as the clerk! easy click clacking on the monitor job and he gets to meet cute animals. sylus doesnt have a scholar but he's applying for one. in the meantime he gets his money from a website he runs. what website? no one knows. is it legal? most likely no. zayne assumed the site is just an illegal movie streaming platform with how sylus always invites him to watch a new movie on his laptop seconds after its release. but he could be running more than one.
neither of them have that of an exciting social life. theyre either nerding out in their room, or taking a mindless stroll to reconnect with nature. sylus collecting rocks and yapping about the history (or drama) of the british royal family and explaining how the monarchy works, zayne identifying different types of clouds and pulling out candy from his pockets every 10 minutes (they never seem to run out). though at one point, sylus knew how important this stage of their life is. theyre not gonna be young forever and they needed friends, people to socialize with and make connections, mingle with people their age. zayne didnt mind having sy as his only friend, but he did think it would be nice to have a small clique. also the networking thing is important too. so whenever theres an event or festival, they'd always go out with intentions to meet people. it was NOT easy. 1. they dont know how to start a conversation without being too pushy or awkward. 2. they both have resting bitch faces and above 6 ft which makes them seem intimidating. 3. even if they did manage to chat with someone, they would quickly realize how different they were from them. most people who join these social events have **been** social, already in big group of friends that go out partying, clubbing, drinking yadda yadda. not that there's anything wrong with that, it's just a very unfamiliar territory for these two nerds who rarely (or during this point, never) let themselves touch alcohol, couped up in their room with a pigeon, a lizard and whatever the hell galen is, watching pirated movies while wearing matching rocky and bullwinkle socks. so after every attempt at making friends, they'd always walk back to their dorm, just the two of them.
are they dating? no. not yet at least. but do they like each other romantically? maybe. i can vouch for sy tho. the first time he saw zayne he was already smitten by how handsome he was. handsome, but not well put together. baggy clothes, his glasses were slightly crooked, looks like he doesnt know what hair gel is. he didnt know if he was even attracted to men, he did know zayne was the most interesting person he's ever met so far. he brushed it off, thinking its just simple admiration. even if it was a crush, it wasnt a big deal. tho as their friendship grew, he got bolder, casually flirting with him from time to time, just because. zayne being the dumbass he is caught none of it. if sy ever reached out to hold his hand, he's like "oh yeah cool bestie activities" or if he gives a quick peck on the cheek before leaving for class "he must be in a good mood haha" or if he stares longingly while zayne yaps about the history of styrofoams, scooching closer, leaning a bit too close, trying to memorize every detail of zayne's face as if he recognized him from a different life, one where theyre both soul bound, sharing the same last name, melting into each other every night "oh wow he's a really good listener".
yk maybe they are dating. zayne just didnt know about it until it was too late.
that's all i have for now!! sem break is right around the corner so i'll expand this au then :)) pray for me final assessment is biting me in the ass im an animation student and i regret everything
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and they were roommates | sylus

sum: sylus responds to an online ad for a roommate. you suddenly have this tall, well-spoken, handsome man living in the attic, playing classical music, tinkering with things he built, and humming off-key while he makes you pancakes in the morning before disappearing for weeks at a time. cw: modern au, roommate au, slice of life, slow burn, mild language, mutual pining, romantic tension, cheesiness, 1.3k wc now playing: still - youâll never get to heaven part 1 | part 2 | part 3
Sleep wonât find you tonight.
Youâre hyper-aware of everything, from the wind weaving through the maple leaves outside to the moth fluttering about your room, hurling itself against the windowpane like it pays rent.Â
The comforterâs wrapped around your legs in a cocoon. Moonlight bleeds in silver streaks across your body as you sit up.Â
With a sigh, you smooth back your hair, studying the wrinkles in your bedspread.Â
There is no singular thing thatâs got you on edge. Itâs a bit of everythingâwork, life, your future, your roomie back and roaming the halls of your house like an apparition, and that moth nearly giving you a heart attack, flying into your face.
Heâs thankfully quiet, Sylus. Always is, mindful of your sleeping schedule despite being a night owl himself. A glance at your phone reveals itâs a little past midnight. Youâre gonna be hurting later.Â
Maybe it is him. Youâve been all jittery and tongue-tied since last week when he alluded to something you were too stupid to pick up on. When he came so close to kissing you and shifting the tide of your relationship after months of tiptoeing around this budding feeling. But you just had to open your big, dumb mouth and drive that wedge even deeper.
Lately, your mindâs been a whirl of confusion, every little smirk, mischievous glint in his eye, and idle brush of fingers taking on new meaning.Â
Figuring some cold water would help ease your nerves, you haul yourself from your bed and shrug into one of your cardigans.
Arms crossed to ward off the crisp whisper of the AC, you pad down the stairs, mindful of each creak in the floorboards, trying not to rouse your roommate on the off chance that he is asleep.Â
The jaundiced glow from the kitchen spills into the hallway as you make your way down. Cold beneath your bare feet. You stop at the common areaâs threshold when you see himâthat hulking figure hunched over the table, tinkering with something too small for his hands.Â
Thereâs a tiny divot between his brows, lips tight with concentration. Heâs got his AirPods in. Sweater sleeves rolled up to the crooks of his elbows, fingers shifting between a small Philips head and wire cutters. Â
You watch him a little longer, hip propped on the doorframe, waiting to see if heâll notice you. Come to think of it, his hairâs gotten longer, sweeping over broad shoulders, a little tousled and damp, probably from a shower. He doesnât look as spent as he did when he first came back. Things must be going well at work.
Done ogling him like a creep, you pad into the dining room. He startles slightly when he catches sight of you, expression easing from mild surprise to an effortless crook of the lips. He tugs out an AirPod, fixing you with those brilliant, boyish red eyes.
âSorry. Did I wake you?â
You wave a dismissive hand, moving to settle beside him on the table. Rest your feet on the chair, ignoring the static discharge between your bodies, tingling your skin. âNah. The existential dread did.â
He huffs a quiet laugh, turning his attention back to the contraption out front after taking a swig from his mug. âIt tends to do that.â
You eye the mess of wiring and microchips with a raised brow, slightly curled over, nudging his thigh with your toes.Â
âThat looks like a detonator.â
âIt is,â he answers too quickly, matter-of-factly, not looking up.
It takes a beat, but you catch onto his sarcasm. Heâs messing with you. Your Sylus, obsessed with Classical music, film noir, talking to a mechanical bird he built like itâs a real one, and helping old ladies pull weeds out of the kindness of his heart, constructing a detonator?Â
Yeah. You are tired.Â
âYou planning to blow up a hospital?â
He holds one of the chips strewn across the table to the light with a set of tweezers, turning it over, scrutinizing it like a gem. âYou have no idea.â
You snort, peeling yourself from the table after clapping him on the shoulder. Squeeze, andâhas he always been this pleasantly rigid?
âAlright, Heath Ledger,â you taunt, walking into the kitchen. âYou have fun with your plans to take over Gotham City.â
Youâre halfway to the fridge when the hot scrawl of steam catches in your periphery near the stove. You turn towards its sourceâyour favorite mug on the counter, filled with something dark and earthy, the faint scent of broken apple skin beckoning to you.
âChamomile,â Sylusâ voice carries from the dining area, âto help you sleep.â
Itâs like he has eyes in the back of his head. That, or he knows you too well, and you suppress those delightful little thrills and that stupid smile threatening to break out onto your face when you take the mug between your palms.
You lean against the counter for a sip. Itâs warm. Delightfully warm, pooling in your belly, the right amount of sweet buried beneath its bitter bite.Â
âDo you always make tea for two?â A shoddy attempt at flirting. A thank you masked by sarcasm.
You watch his shoulder blades swim beneath his sweater as he shrugs. âOnly when I know someone canât sleep.â
You scoff, venturing back to his side, sliding onto your spot on the table thatâs still warm. You study him from the rim of your mug held to your lips as the crackle of plastic and copper wiring salts the airâthose unfairly pretty lashes, the quiet confidence in his eyes, his sloped nose.Â
Youâre staring again. A tad too long, blinking away your reverie, the steam watering your eyes, and you sip your tea.
If he notices, he doesnât mention it. Just smiles that knowing smile, in on a secret you know nothing of.
âYou know, I once read that insomnia is a byproduct of avoiding something.â
You stiffen. He doesnât have to look at you for you to know heâs calling you out in that way that bleeds Sylus. Youâre in this picture, and you donât like it.
Your tone is sagely. âYou read that somewhere? Iâm assuming from one of those old, moldy tomes in your room?â
He chuckles, and you love that sound. It pinches something in your belly. Reminds you of fall and mahogany and cured leather sliding against your fingertips.
The silence settles again. Comfortable, typical. Youâve moved closer without noticing, his arm teasing your thigh each time he shifts. You could conquer the space between you with a breath out. Youâre closer than roommates, both physically and metaphorically. Â
Youâre both keenly aware of that fact, yet neither of you makes a move to bridge the gap.Â
Setting down your mug, you stuff your hands in your cardigan pockets. Drop your shoulders along with your defenses, voice thick in your throat.
âWhat if I said I wasnât trying to avoid anything, but instead trying to confront something?â
You donât know what it is about him that makes you feel so at ease. Gives you diarrhea of the mouth.Â
He sets his supplies down with a soft, definitive clack. Slowly turns your way, and youâre holding your breath. His eyes slide over your features like heâs searching for something. Like heâs weighing something in his mind before they snap to yours.Â
âThen Iâd say youâre not alone.â
The atmosphere between you tilts. Thickens with particles rubbing together so fast, it grows hot. Neither of you looks away, and neither of you makes a move to go.Â
Youâre just two idiots wordlessly feeling each other out, trying not to burn up like meteors streaking across the stratosphere.Â
One step forward feels like another ten back. Â
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ŕ¨ŕ§ â The hotel room door closes with a soft click behind you, the pale light of the moon streaming through floor to ceiling windows.
Nanami had reserved the penthouse suite, ordered champagne that cost more than most people's rent, and even scattered rose petals across the king sized bed like fallen prayers. The man- your now husband, had ensured every detail was perfect for this moment after your wedding.
Because nothing- absolutely nothing, was ever too much when it came to you.
His hands wind around your waist from behind with the same reverence he'd shown sliding the ring onto your fingers hours ago. It was almost like he was memorizing the moment through touch alone. "Mrs. Nanami," he murmurs against your ear, and you feel him smile at the unfamiliar weight of your new name. "My wife," pressing his lips against your neck, the word still foreign on his tongue but sweeter than any bread he's ever had.
You lean into his warmth, the soft fabric of his tuxedo rubbing against the back of your own dress. "Mr. Nanami," you breathe, reaching back to caress his cheek, and you feel him press into you more at the title, his grip on you tightening, "My husband."
His fingers found the delicate zipper at your spine, drawing it down with practiced patience. Each inch of exposed skin received its own blessing- lips, warm breath, soft touches that made you arch against him.
"So beautiful,â he breathes against your vertebrae, "always so beautiful." his breath ghosts over your bare shoulders as the white gown slides away like shed silk... "Perfect," he adds, voice hitching as the fabric pools at your feet in waves of ivory and lace, leaving you in nothing but intricate lingerie. The garter belt sits high on your thigh- his gift to you, adorned with a diamond that matches the one on your finger.Â
Turning you in his arms, "Gorgeous," his lips find yours in a sweet kiss, hands tracing your jaw, "Stunning," he whispers, cupping the nape of your neck as he draws you deeper, tongue coaxing a quiet moan from your lips⌠"All mine." he says with a low growl. All these words heavy with the weight of a man who's never been careless with language. When Nanami Kento calls you beautiful, gorgeous, stunning... perfect, it's because he's catalogued every detail that makes them true.
And it was all reserved just for you. Only for you.
Your hands reach up to push the jacket from his shoulders, fumbling with the buttons of his shirt- needy and impatient until he caught your hands. "Slowly," he commanded gently, "we have all night."
His mouth traced the column of your throat, pausing at your pulse point to feel your heart racing. "I love how responsive you are," he murmured, teeth grazing your collarbone, "how you tremble when I touch you here..." his thumb traced your nipple through delicate white lace⌠"How you make those little sounds..."
A soft moan escaped as he took the lace covered peak between his teeth, rolling gently until your knees buckled.
"That sound," he groaned, steadying you against his chest, "I'm going to spend tonight learning all the new ones you'll make as my wife."
"Mmph~ K-Kento~ oh god I-"
"Shhh, I'll take care of you," he promises, fingers ghosting along the lacy edge of your panties, "just like I always do, only this time..." his thumb rubs circles through the thin fabric of your thong, a teasing pressure against the bundle of nerves that has you moaning and rocking against his hand, "i think i'll make sure this whole building knows you're Mrs. Nanami now."
His strong arms hook beneath your legs, lifting you effortlessly to settle you among the rose petals. The bed dipping under his knee as he follows, hovering over you like a man worshipping at an altar, fingers caressing your face as he takes a moment to simply admire the picture you make- sprawled out beneath him.Â
"I love you," the words barely audible as he leans down, lips finding the delicate skin of your inner thigh, teeth grazing the delicate skin, "so much." Your back arches involuntarily as he finds the diamond adorning the middle of your garter, giving it a flick with his tongue before tracing the silk band with calloused fingers. "I'm so glad you didn't toss this earlier," he admits... "When you told everyone you were keeping it... I was relieved you wanted to skip that particular tradition."
The diamond catches in the moonlight as you bite your lip, a sweet smile playing at the corners of your mouth, "Well~ I was thinking," you card your fingers through his styled hair, mussing the soft strands, "maybe I could wear just this when you come home from work from now on."
His eyes snap to yours, "Don't," his tone serious- the careful control he's maintained all evening fracturing at your words... "Don't tell me things like that unless you want me taking extended lunch breaks to come home⌠I don't think I'd be able to control myself if you did." he confesses, and the honesty in his voice has your heart skipping a beat, "I barely manage now."
Without breaking eye contact, he catches the garter between his teeth, his lips grazing your skin as he drags it achingly slow down your thigh, "do you know how many nights Iâve dreamed of you greeting me at the door wearing nothing but this?" With a final tug, he slips the garter free, letting it dangle from his mouth before tossing it aside with a smirk.
"K-Kento please~" You squirm under his heated gaze, thighs squeezing together, trying to relieve the throbbing ache between your legs, but the action only makes it worse⌠"Please don't tease me tonight. I can't-"
"Please what, darling?" a lock of his hair falls in his eyes, "Tell your husband what you need." He runs his hands up the back of your thighs, lifting and spreading them apart. The sight of his head between your legs, looking up at you from beneath the fall of his hair has you biting the inside of your cheek...
"Please~" the word barely a whisper, "M'need you, Kento. Need my husband to make a mess of me hah~"
Your words dissolve as he removes your lace thing- his mouth finding you bare and fucking soaked, "God," he groans against you, tongue swiping at your slick folds.Â
He devours you like communion wine, like salvation itself, tongue fucking into your entrance, a thumb circling the small bud above.
"Nghhh fuck~" Your eyes squeeze shut, the pressure building, hips rolling to meet his tongue, your juices covering his chin.
"So sweet," he groans, the words muffled against your pussy, the vibration making you buck against him, "I could savor you all night."
With that he rises up, mouth leaving you empty and aching, his hands pinning your hips to the bed, "But I think i'll save the rest of my appetizer for later." He smirks down at you, wiping the remnants of your slick off his chin with the back of his hand.
Slowly, he reaches down to unbuckle his belt, pulling it free in a single motion, "Put your arms above your head, love," he orders softly, watching as you obey without question, a soft gasp escaping when he catches both your wrists, securing them with his belt. "This is my wedding night as well, after allâŚ" securing the leather strap around the frame of the headboard, "And I intend to take my time with you."
Your fingers curl around the smooth leather, testing the bindings as his cock springs free, precum already pearling at the tip. The head is flushed, straining, and aching to be buried in your heat.
"Fuck-," he groans, hand gripping the base, thumb sweeping his weeping slit, "you have no idea what you do to me."
He positions himself between your thighs, the thick head of his cock teasing your entrance, sliding along your wet folds, the tip catching your clit, and then he's sinking into you, a strangled groan torn from his throat as you wrap around him like a vice.
Each thrust has the bedframe creaking as he fills you completely, perfectly, his cock stretching you just right. His forehead rests against yours, breath mingling as you move together, the only sounds in the room are the obscene sounds of your joined bodies, your broken cries, his grunts of pleasure.
"Ah! Mnnnh Kento~" You writhe beneath him, tugging at the restraints, body arching and straining for release, but the position keeps you helpless, a moaning wreck, pinned and bound by his cock, his weight, his strength.
"Harder~" The word slips out before you can stop it, and you feel him still above you.
"Are you certain?" His voice carries an edge now, something darker lurking beneath the tenderness.
"Please, Kento. I need⌠I need you to fuck me. Mâneed my husband to make me scream~."
The change is immediate. Your sweet gentle Nanami, replaced by his more desperate⌠pent up, and demanding side- god you loved it when he got like this~. His thrusts become punishing, deep enough to make you see stars- head so dizzy it causes you to babble incoherently. And his words⌠oh, his words turn absolutely filthy.
"This what my precious wife needs?" he rasps, breath hot against your throat as his cock drives deep, "Her loving husband splitting this perfect pussy open, making her beg for more like a whore."
The headboard rocks against the wall as he thrusts into you, one hand fisted in your hair, the other gripping your hip hard enough to leave marks. "Look how you're taking it," he pants, voice breaking, "Greedy little thing swallowing my cock. You're dripping all over the sheets, darling."
When he pulls out heâs quickly undoing his belt from your wrists- flipping you onto your stomach hastily as you whimper at the sudden emptiness. But then he's slamming back into you from behind, the new angle making you scream into the pillows.
"That's it," he groans, watching as that pretty pussy of yours grips him each time he withdraws, "let the whole hotel hear how good your husband fucks you. Let them know how desperate- how hungry you are for my cock."
His hand comes down on your ass with a brutal crack, making you clench and gush around him. "You like that, don't you? My beautiful wife likes being spanked while she gets her pussy destroyed from behind."
"Y-yesss! Oh god, yesss!" you babble, drool pooling at the corner of your lips as you're fucked senseless- eyes rolling back, "I love it when you ahhhh! when you use me like this!" Your voice breaks into needy whimpers, pussy clenching desperately around his length as he pounds into you, "Yesyesyes! Fuck me harder!"
He sets a brutal pace, each thrust hitting that spot deep inside that makes your vision white out, your body trembling as you lose yourself completely to the sensation. "Please," you moan, saliva dripping from your parted lips, "don't stop... mâneed it so bad... need your cock so fâhah- fucking deep..."
"Going to stuff you so full," he growls against your ear, teeth sinking into your shoulder, "give you everything until youâre overflowing with it⌠until your belly swells with it..."
His movements stutter for just a heartbeat- eyes widening in shock at what he'd just said⌠Until your belly swells... Did he really just confess he wants to make a child with you tonight? The admission sends a shock through his system even as his cock throbs harder at the thought.
"I- âŚ," he breathes shakily, almost stunned by his own desperate need. But there's no taking it back now⌠the raw truth is out.
"D-do it~" you coo breathlessly, the words sending a shiver of pure want down his spine. Your fingers push back his hair, holding him close, and the way you look at him... The sheer amount of adoration and love in your eyes, it nearly steals his breath away. You are the light of his life...
His thrusts become erratic, sloppy, each one driven by that new need to create something precious- a son, a daughter⌠either or it didnât matter.
"Look at me," he gasps, his voice breaking. "I want to see your face when I- ngh-"
Your eyes lock as his control finally snaps. With a broken moan of your name, Nanami buries himself to the hilt and releases. Hot sticky ropes of cum flood your womb, painting your inner walls white as he empties himself completely. Your own orgasm washing over you from the fullness of him, your pussy clenching and milking every last drop from his throbbing cock.
Afterward, you lie tangled together, skin slick with sweat and cum. He holds you close, pressing soft kisses to your neck as you both slowly return to earth, his cum slowly leaking out of your thoroughly used pussy.
Later, much later, dawn creeps through silk curtains to find Nanami already awake, memorizing the sight of you sleeping peacefully beside him. His thumb traces over your wedding ring, this symbol of a future he never dared imagineâŚ
"Wife," he whispers to himself, the word starting to sound less foreign.
HusbandâŚ
Thats what he is now.
And someday, perhaps sooner than later⌠A father.
He tucks a strand of hair behind your ear, marveling at you- this woman who chose him, who said yes to forever with a man who once thought love was a luxury- the only luxury he thought he couldnât afford in his dangerous line of work. Now he knew this, it was the only wealth that mattered⌠and he was the richest man alive.
Ëââ§ę°á. đđśđđđđđđžđđ ŕťęą â§âË
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. . . đIT â RECORD â

ę° contents ęąŕžŕ˝˛ pure smut! fem!reader. p in v. doing it raw for the first time. eating you out. cowgirl & doggy position. sort of mirror sex. c*mming inside.
âď¸ ŕžŕ˝˛ . . now this is the longest smut piece i've ever written. i couldn't stop imagining doing this with him oh my gosh im going feral ŕťę°ŕžŕ˝˛ăŁË -・ęąŕžŕ˝˛ŕ§§
when you had first brought up the idea to your husband nanami, you would've never guessed just how much he would love it. it was a surprise even to himself.
as he adjusts the camera one last time, he finally clicks the record button before sauntering over to you who's already sprawled sexily on the bed wearing the cutest lace lingerie set. his eyes roam all over you, drinking you all in, thinking you look so unbelievably gorgeous in those pink little panties.
he hooks his arms under your thighs, pulling you closer to the edge of the bed, making you yelp softly in surprise. he just takes a moment to admire your beautiful self laid beneath him, your sweet doe eyes batting your eyelashes at him that has his heart doing flips.
his fingers graze your cheek tenderly, his eyes moving down to your glossy lips as he whispers, "you look so adorable, my love." a light blush creeps on your face, as you look away and then suddenly all too aware that you're being recorded. you shift slightly under his touch, turning your head away so that the camera doesn't catch you.
nanami's lips curl into a gentle smile as he places a finger under your chin to make you look at him. "don't hide that pretty face of yours, darling," he says. "i want to see you."
your face only grows darker but you nod â the whole idea was yours anyway and even though you are now feeling awfully shy, you want this as much as him.
he moves on top of you, his shirt already discarded somewhere in the room, which lets you ogle at his toned muscles. he sees how you stare at him which makes him blush now â no matter how many times you two have had sex, he can't help feeling so coy under your gaze.
his lips find yours in a sweet kiss, moving slow and tender, savouring the way you taste on his tongue and lips. he rests his hand under your neck, pulling you in deeper and closer as your arms drape over his neck. a quiet hum leaves him, the tent in his sweats growing and brushing against your thighs.
"can i take off my pants, sweetheart?," he asks in between kissing you. he still always asks for your permission before doing anything. he feels so wrong if he doesn't.
you nod, your fingers tracing lines over his chest, circling near his nipples. it's one of the most sensitive parts of him and you love the way he tries to hold the little whimpers that come out of him. you softly rub his perked up buds quite suddenly and his body trembles above you, quiet honeyed moans leaving him. "sweetheart," he whispers. "that feels so good."
you continue your ministrations, revelling in the way he feebly whimpers in your ear. his hands roam over your body, finding purchase on your boobs. he palms them in his large hand, giving them a few squeezes here and there as you flick your fingers over his nipples.
he's grinding his hips on your sopping core, pre leaking from his tip and staining his boxers. he unlatches his lips from yours to quickly shimmy his sweats off and throws them aside before continuing to rub his shaft over your wet clothed cunt.
he gets himself off of you and kneels down in front of the bed, pulling you towards him with your pretty pussy in front of his face. he looks back at the camera, positioning you in a way that makes it so that you're on display. once he's happy with how you are, he runs his fingers over your panties, feeling your wetness. he lets out a content groan before pushing your panties to the side, your glistening core so enticing.
"always so pretty for me," he coos, more so to your pussy than to you. his fingers go up and down your slit a few times which makes you tremble slightly. he smirks to himself as he pushes in one, two digits into you, stretching you out. you moan as he does so, gripping the sheets beneath you while he slides his fingers in and out of you at a steady pace.
he brings his mouth to your core, licking a few slow strips on it, groaning at how sweet you taste. his fingers and tongue work deliciously on your candied core and he's making the most obscene and pornographic noises as he does so. you're mewling cutely as he eats you out, your thighs squishing the sides of his head. "oh yes!," you whine, tugging on his hair. "j-just like that, nana."
'nana.' he finds your nickname for him so adorable that it just has him ravaging on you, spit dribbling from his mouth, drenching what's beneath you. you're squirming and crying out his little nickname, completely blissed out from the pleasure.
nanami has always been so good at taking care of you, it truly boggled your mind when he first ate you out. from then on, you were addicted â yet he was so much more when it came to eating you out. it's as if he lived to serve you.
he feels you clenching around his digits, your moans getting louder and higher, indicating your climax is nearing. "you gonna cum for me, darling?," he purrs, suckling your clit and drinking you all in. your grip on his hair tightens and at this point, you're the one in control, bobbing his head up and down while his flattened tongue is on your sweet core. his eyes peer up at you and he sees your pretty face, moaning out his name as you come undone on his face.
"mmm, always so good f'me," he praises, popping his fingers out of you and placing dove-like kisses along your inner thighs. you're still trembling as you come down from your high and he runs his hands on your thighs to help you calm down.
"ken?," you muse, propping yourself up on your elbows to look at him. he hums in acknowledgment as he rises from in between your thighs to give you a kiss to your temple, the simple gesture being a way to tell you that you did amazing.
it takes a few moments to get yourself to ask the question â "do you wanna try doing it without a condom?"
his eyes go wide, more pre leaking from his tip and the stain on his boxers growing bigger. he takes in a harsh gulp, the idea of getting to feel you raw around him making him dizzy. "you sure about that, love?," he asks, leaning down to press a trail of kisses on your neck.
"yes, i'm sure," you say breathily, tilting your head to the side so that he has more area to kiss. "i've wanted to try it for a while now."
"okay darling," he says as coolly as he can, trying not to show just how much he's been dying to do this with you. he takes in a deep breath before he removes his boxers, his thick cock slapping against his abdomen, heavy and leaking.
he takes a quick glance at the camera that's still recording you two to see how you look and gosh, you're stunning. "do you want to change the angle of the camera or anything?," he asks, hovering above you.
you contemplate his question for a bit and then a teeny smile crosses your face. he quirks an eyebrow at your expression and he's just about to ask you what you were thinking but you're already getting up from the bed and grabbing the camera from where it was standing. you tell him to lay on his back as you straddle him, the camera still in your hand.
you give the camera over to him and say in your sweet, meek voice, "you can video me. if you like."
he feels his cock twitch at the thought and he agrees in a heartbeat. he turns to the camera to point at you, adjusting it so that it can take you all in. "start whenever you like, sweetheart," he muses, giving you a little thumbs up. the gesture makes you giggle â this dorky man.
you line yourself with his cock which is leaking with pre. you use your thumb to spread it around, making him mewl softly at your touch. the camera is pointing right at your entrance, his wet tip just grazing over it. you slowly lower yourself down on him and the moment you do, both of you moan out at the delicious feeling. you can feel every vein and ridge on his girthy dick and he can feel your warm, syrupy walls suck him in.
"fuck," he hisses, almost losing control of the device in his hands. "'s too good. feels too good."
"mhm," you whine, sinking yourself onto him until he's completely in there. he has to try so, so hard not to cum in you right then and there. you lightly roll your hips against his, intoxicated with how you can feel him all around you. he's letting low grunts, biting on his lips so hard he could bleed. but he just wants to make sure that the camera captures your sweet noises more than his own.
"oh, just like that," he says, one hand now coming to grip your sides to help you move on him. you're letting out such cute noises and your tits are bouncing a little with every movement.
nanami feels like he's losing his mind â he doesn't know if he should look at you directly or look at you through the camera, feeling like he's spoiled for choice; and the way you're squeezing his dick has him nearly rolling his eyes to the back of his head.
you begin to lift your hips up and come crashing down on him, doing it in a steady rhythm. you raise your hips off of him until he's almost all the way out, just his tip inside of you. you stay that way for a few moments before you take him all in again, and that has him groaning prettily as you do so. your walls seem to clench him tighter and it feels all too much for him.
"so beautiful," he coos, pointing the camera to get a glimpse of your cutely contorted face as you moan his name out over and over again.
a blush taints your face, creeping down to your neck as you ride him, the room filling with both of your salacious moans and the smacking of your hips coming down on his own. your hands come to cup your boobs, rubbing over your nipples, your moans louder and needier. he tilts the camera upwards to capture the beautiful view in front of him and he is restraining himself so much, it's beginning to make him feel fuzzy and lightheaded.
"baby," he groans lowly. "can you- can you get on all fours f'me?"
you smile charmingly as you get off of him and comply to his request. you arch your back gorgeously for him, your slick puffy core on display. he groans at the sight, getting up to be on his knees behind you. he films your cute ass, rubbing it and giving it a few spankings that has you jolting forward. sometimes nanami forgets how strong he is.
he takes his free hand, pumping his cock a few times that's smeared with your arousal. he rubs his tip on your dripping slit before pushing himself back into you, letting out a string of curses as he feels your velvety walls mould around his cock. "god, you feel so good sweetie," he grunts, snapping his hips into you.
you lurch forward with each of his rough thrusts, your hands fisting the sheets beneath you. "ken ken ken!," you cry, the most dulcet of moans tumbling from your lips. his hips ram into you â thwack! thwack! thwack! â your ass rippling with each hit and lines of your arousal connecting with the base of his cock.
"such a good girl," he growls, bringing the camera over where you and him meet, capturing the way he ruts into you at a relentless pace. "always such a good girl f'me."
he lifts his head up and his jaw goes slack when he sees what's in front of him. unknowingly, you had positioned yourself to face the mirror where he could see the way your eyes are fluttering and how your mouth is agape as the prettiest moans come out of it.
he raises the camera to shoot the sexy and hot sight before him. oh, he begins to go crazy. his strokes are mean, rough, languid as he videos you from the mirror, completely in awe at how fucked out you look for him. he's sure you don't even know he can see you like this because you're just so dumbed out with the feel of his length inside of you â his fat head kissing your g-spot repeatedly and your velvety walls cinching around him.
"you like that huh?," he grouses and starts to babble mindlessly. "like how i fuck you, don't you? such a pretty little thing for me. taking me so well every time. you take me so well, baby."
"yes yes yes!," you whine out, not even truly taking in everything he's saying because of how deliciously he's fucking you. "you're so good t'me, ken!"
"yes i am," he chuckles with a smug smirk on his face, slamming his hips into yours but the pace sloppier and needier now. he's getting closer to his climax and the way your pussy is fluttering around him, he can tell you are too.
"where do you want me to cum, baby?," he asks, his pace not slowing down in the slightest. it's getting increasingly harder for him to keep the camera steady, to keep videoing you.
"inside please," you wail, arching your back further. an almost guttural groan erupts from deep within his chest as he bang, bang, bangs into you, and soon enough he's unloading into you, painting your walls white with his hot seed. your pussy spasms around his shaft, milking him dry and milking him for what he's worth.
"fuck," he hisses as he pulls out of you. the camera catches your quivering form and how his cum is dripping out of you. he bites his lip at the view. he uses two of his fingers to shove it all back into you, not allowing a drop to go to waste. you whimper adorably as he stuffs you full of himself, your pussy doing its best to suck it all in.
with the camera still in one of his hands, he uses his free one to help you flip over on your back and lets it take you all in â your chest rising up and down as you try to catch your breath and you looking so adorable in your lingerie set despite the sheen of sweat coating your body. "you are so beautiful, my love," he whispers, hand trailing up your body to your face, cupping it gently.
safe to say, whenever nanami is away from you for too long, he always has this little video in hand. he fists his cock so pathetically, just wishing it was you around him instead.
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The first time Sylus falls asleep in your presence, youâre left feeling a little odd. Well, maybe odd wasnât the best word to describe it.
But the warm sensation that filled your chest was certainly something new. Sylus never fell asleep first, or around you for that matter. Most of the time, it was you dozing off because you had been thrusted into his sleeping schedule for a mission and it was catching up. Now, though, you were left a little stunned. Your eyes blinked slowly as you memorized every inch of his sleeping form.
Sylus lies on his stomach, arms cradling the pillow his head rests on. His face â usually stoic, jaw tight, an air of calm and confidence shrouding him â his now perfectly relaxed.Â
His jaw is lax, lips parted slightly as the softest snores slip in and out. Heâs calm, totally unguarded. Heâs let down one of his biggest walls, heâs laying beside you completely unconscious, utterly vulnerable.Â
You just... stare. So enraptured by the sight, the ability to be able to so shamelessly admire him, that you can't so much as remember to breathe. He's just existing, and yet he's knocked the wind out of you.
There is something so special about this moment, not only because of the fact that he trusts you enough, but because you have grown to love the man beside you so deeply it hurts your chest.
It should be no surprise that your fingers reach out, gingerly tracing the sharp lines of his jaw, his nose, his cheekbones. So careful with your touches in fear of waking him up and ruining the moment. You pull away slowly, scooting your body closer so you can land a carefully calculated kiss on the tip of his nose.
Nothing seems more appealing than this, falling asleep here and now right beside him. Enjoying his warmth and the vulnerability you are both willing to share with one another.

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Nine months of hard work and he came out looking just like his dad đ¤Łđ¤Ł Happy Fatherâs Day everyone!
P.s. A lot of people liked my rendered painting so I tried adapting it into a comic ver. Hope you all like it too! đĽš
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if it's not the sound of him grunting and groaning "fuckkk you feel so good" while his skin rhythmically slaps into mine then i don't wanna hear it
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Men who make you hold your thighs up and back so they have a better angle to grind their cock through your folds đĽš
Men who get a little too into it and end up pushing your legs up flush against your chest, just so they can feel you twitch beneath their hands when they graze the tip over your clit đĽš
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