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chishiyasan · 23 hours
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KAKEGURUI (2018) dir. Hanabusa Tsutomu
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chishiyasan · 23 hours
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TITANIC (1997) Dir. James Cameron
Teach me to ride like a man. And chew tobacco like man. And spit like a man.
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chishiyasan · 23 hours
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♡   —   pairing: kokonoi x reader
♡   —   summary: entering the games together seemed like a good idea. the best idea kokonoi and you had ever had, actually. that was, of course, until you learnt the true nature of the game.
♡   —   tags/warnings: character death, squid games au, game-related violence, use of guns, angst, mentions of poverty, profanity
♡   —   words: 2.4k
♡   —   a/n: this was a commission made by @ultramarinesa! thank you for giving me a lot of creative freedom for this one, i enjoyed writing it a lot! c:
♡   —  masterlist
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It was the best idea he had ever had.
Just an easy way to win some money. All he had to do was win some games —just as he did when he was a kid— and he could finally start giving you the life you deserved. The house with the white picket fence, Sunday mornings having brunch at your porch instead of watching you pace around your one-bedroom apartment wondering where are you going to pay for this month’s light bill.
If he wasn’t able to win the game, then he was sure you’d had no problem beating him and everyone that dared defy you. He had always been entranced with how competitive and clever you could be. He knew you had what it took to be the winner and receive all the money you deserved.
Worst case scenario, neither of you won and you came back home, trying to figure out a new way to earn money and stop eating those instant noodles he was sure were made of plastic.
It was the worst idea he had ever had.
When he closed his eyes, Kokonoi could still hear the gunshots and smell the blood on the floor of the hundreds of people that had died in the first game. He remembered pushing you to the floor and shielding you with his body when everyone started running to the back as they were being shot.
After the first batch of shots, he stood up as soon as the creepy doll chanted “Green Light” and helped you up on your feet as well. “Stand behind me” was the order he gave you before they changed into “Red Light”. He could still feel your shaky hands holding onto the back of his jacket as you did your best to calm your scared breathing.
It was a joke the way they tried to give everyone an out. While the possibility of staying was a little bit alluring, a simple look at you was enough to clear his head. You were sitting on one of the beds, hugging your knees and trembling. Your eyes were unfocused, and he could tell you were replaying the earlier events inside your mind.
When he was asked to vote, he chose to leave. However, when it came to counting the votes, the majority decided to stay.
That night, he crawled into your bed, holding your body as you silently cried on his chest.
“It’s all going to be okay,” he had whispered against your temple, leaving soft, feather-like kisses on your skin. “We’re winning this and going back home. I promise a week from now, you’re going to see the sun again.”
You didn’t reply— but made sure to hold onto him tighter.
Neither of you had trouble during the second game. The circle reminded both of you of his promise of the sun and was the figure you both chose. Rather than licking it, both of you poured a good amount of spit on top of it and then started working with the needle. You were one of the first people to come back to the main room.
Kokonoi’s tall figure and menacing look were appreciated when they were looking for more people once the third game came. And even if they gave you a dirty look after he explained he wasn’t going anywhere without you, they still took you in.
As you returned yet again to the main room, you couldn’t help but think what happened outside was pure luck. And by how silent Kokonoi was as he walked beside you, you knew he thought so as well.
The fourth game came soon enough and you were asked to choose a partner. Even if you knew you were working together as you always did, you couldn’t help but smile when you felt your boyfriend’s arm around your shoulders.
“We got this,” he smirked and you nodded, smiling brightly at him.
You were already halfway there. And whatever life threw at you, you were sure you could do it together. Lack of money had impacted the both of you terribly, sharing canned tuna like a delicacy and making up new and better excuses whenever your landlord came to collect rent. It didn’t matter what you had to face, you knew that as long as he was holding your hand, you had nothing to fear.
That was why it was so hard when it came to choosing who had to die.
Kokonoi held onto his marbles tightly, veins appearing on his hand as he looked down. Both of you sat on the ground, grim looks on your faces as the clock kept ticking. None had said a word since the rules were explained— the weight of the reality you were facing was way worse than your worst nightmares.
A cold breeze made you shiver, and you rubbed your hands together. You wished you hadn’t left your jacket on your bed.
“I think you should win this round,” you said, breaking the silence.
“Shut up.”
“Haji—”
“Shut up, let me think,” he cut you off harshly. You bit your bottom lip, looking down at your bag of marbles. Taking one of them, you rolled it with your fingers and smiled a little as fond memories of your childhood came to your mind.
“You know, my sister and I used to play marbles a lot. She would always win, of course—”
“I said let me—”
“—but the next morning my marbles were back in my drawer, so we still could play the next day,” you remembered, letting out a shaky laugh. “It didn’t matter how many times I lost and she took all my marbles, I knew the next day they would be back in my drawer and we could play again.”
Kokonoi looked at you, glassy eyes and furrowed eyebrows in his handsome face.
“Whatever game we decided to play, she always won. I was always way too clumsy, a bit too stupid to manage to win one game.”
“You’re not stupid—”
“That’s why I ended up dropping out of high school. And why I never got to keep one job and ended up getting fired so many times,” you dryly chuckled. “But, even if I never truly exceeded in anything, I found you.”
Your eyes filled with tears, a sad grin on your face as you leaned over and took Kokonoi’s free hand in yours.
“I may have never been lucky or good at something— but asking for your help in that parking lot when my car was malfunctioning was the best decision I ever made,” you said, squeezing his hand. Kokonoi held a grimace on his lips as he looked at you. “Being with you these past years, that’s the luckiest I’ve ever been. And I wouldn’t change it for anything.”
“You don’t—”
“Hajime, you’re the smart one. You always find ways to get more money, you are the one that finds these jobs and I tag along when you ask them if they need more people. Without you… I’m not going to make it out there.”
“Don’t say that,” he whispered. His voice was shaky and tears were threatening to fall down his cheeks. “I only do that because of you. Everything I do, fuck— everything I am, it’s because of you. The only reason I want money is so you can be happy, so you—”
“If I’m the one that walks out of here,” you interrupted him, taking a deep breath before you continued. “I’m lost. Not only because I’m leaving my heart here, but because you’ve always been the one that was meant to succeed. You are the one that’s meant to go far in life, not me.”
“I’m also the one that pulled us into that debt,” he reminded you.
“And the one that’s going to get out of it with some really smart idea to win money,” you assured him, a smile on your face as your tears finally fell. “I always adored your clever little mind. It’s only fair that the thing that I love the most gets to outlive me.”
Kokonoi’s eyes set on yours, taking in your words. Slowly, one tear after the other started rolling down his cheeks as he softly nodded.
“Fuck these things,” he angrily muttered, throwing his bag of marbles to the side. An honest laugh escaped your lips and you imitated him, putting your bag next to his. “Fuck everything, I— I’m so sorry. This was my idea, I thought— I really thought—”
“Hey, hey,” you shushed him. You crawled towards him and then kneeled in front of him. Cupping his face, you forced him to look at you and wiped his tears with your thumbs. “This isn’t your fault, okay? We both made this decision. We chose the best option considering the information we had at the time.”
“I’m so sorry,” he repeated. “I really wanted to have a lifetime with you.”
“And we did,” you sobbed, a weak smile forming on your lips. “We shared a part of our lives together and we made each other happy. I wouldn’t have had it any other way.”
“Listen, just— listen to me,” Kokonoi said, taking your hands from his face and putting them on his lap, holding onto them tightly.
His dark eyes locked with yours and, even if you were both still crying, he has never seen you so clearly before. He took his time memorizing each of your features, from the curve of your eyebrows to the colour of your lips. Kokonoi wished he had forced his eyes awake when you were back at your apartment and the moonlight from the window made your skin look like a dream.
If he had just fought the looming sleepiness maybe he wouldn’t be missing you when neither of you had left. If he hadn’t walked into massive debt, if he had found a better way to make money, if he hadn’t told you about the game—
Kokonoi’s eyes looked up, noticing you only had ten minutes left. His gaze went back to you and he took a deep breath. He kneeled in front of you and cupped your cheek with his right hand, biting his inner cheek.
“Listen, this waiting is killing me. I’m going to ask one of those pink guys if we can enter one of these houses or at least their backyard. Let us have a proper goodbye as a couple, away from—”
A gunshot made both of you tremble.
“Away from all of this mess,” he finished as a body fell not very far away from you. “But first… I want you to have this.” He took off his green jacket.
“Why?” you asked, watching him as he carefully slid it up your arms. “Koko?”
“Because you’ve been trembling this whole time. And— I want a part of me to be with you, to the very end,” he explained in a low voice, his eyes not meeting yours. You swallowed and nodded, feeling new tears roll down your cheeks.
As soon as you finished putting on his jacket, you grabbed your bag of marbles and let Kokonoi help you stand up. Once you were in front of each other, he put his hands on your shoulders. His hands were trembling, and you could see how much trouble it was causing him not to cry again.
“You…” he started, but his voice cracked.
“Koko, it’s okay—”
“No.” He took a step closer and moved his hands to your cheeks, cradling it tenderly. His thumbs grazed against your skin, catching you tears as he engrained the picture of you inside his mind. “You will always be the best thing that happened to me. You say that you were never good at anything and— that’s a lie. That’s a fucking lie because just by existing you were already good enough. Always have been. I’m sorry— I’m so sorry that I didn’t tell you so every day we spent together. I will carry the guilt forever. I really will.”
Kokonoi cursed under his breath, shoulders rising up and down with his heavy breathing.
“You gave my life meaning. And nothing I do will ever be as important as that. Okay?” You sniffled and nodded at his words. “Okay?” he insisted.
“Yes,” you answered and a ghost of a smile drew over his lips.
“Good,” he whispered before pressing his lips against yours.
As Kokonoi and you shared your last kiss, you wished you had done that more. Hold onto his body longer like you were doing now, relish in his warmth as his lips glided over yours, dropping silent love promises only your heart was able to decipher.
More gunshots were happening in the background yet neither of you flinched, all of the other sounds muted for all you cared. It wasn’t until he pulled away, eyes dazed and lips swollen that you came back to Earth, to your reality, where everything had always seemed better whenever he was around.
“I love you.”
Kokonoi’s face broke into a smirk. “I love you too. I’m gonna ask the pink guy, okay? I want you to be away from all of this before anything happens.”
“Okay,” you whispered, cold crawling under your skin as soon as he stepped away from you.
You watched Kokonoi walk to the closest guy that was holding a gun, a triangle shape on his mask. Straight posture and never afraid to face adversities, your boyfriend looked up to him, waiting until the man turned his head towards him.
“She’s got all the marbles. I lost.”
Once again, all the noise disappeared. However, now what was left was a nauseating ringing that crossed your head from ear to ear, clouding your mind as you tried to understand what was happening.
“What? No, I only have mine!” you explained, holding out the marbles bag in your hand and showing it to the guard. You opened it and poured the ten marbles on your palm. “See? There’s only ten— Koko, what are you doing?! We decided to—”
“She has the rest on her jacket’s pocket,” he continued, his back turned to yours as he spoke.
“I don’t, I—”
You turned your left pocket outside out, showing it was empty. When you tried to do the same with your right, your fingers found a small bag inside. Your hand trembled as you took it out and your eyes widened in horror once the pieces started falling together. The image of Kokonoi’s bag made your heart sink. You felt an invisible hand close around your throat as you stood in shock, breathing heavily through your mouth.
Kokonoi slowly turned on his heel as he faced you, a calm smile on his lips as he took one last look at you.
“The best damn thing that ever happened to me.”
The gunshot was deafening.
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chishiyasan · 23 hours
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HEARTBREAKING: character actually mildly interesting to think about but I Dont like their fans
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chishiyasan · 23 hours
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Being constantly horny for fictional dick is such a hard full time job.
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chishiyasan · 1 day
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LIMITLESS ∞ 無下限
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chishiyasan · 2 days
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oomf wanted a totoro x jjk crossover 🥹🌱
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chishiyasan · 2 days
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Alice in Wonderland (1951) dir. Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, and Hamilton Luske.
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chishiyasan · 2 days
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do you right series/multiple parts for zoro opla X reader. If you do could you write something angsty n maybe reader was a part the butlers crew before n stuff. A lot of angst but also fluff n cute zoro X reader moments. Thxxx
prompt list reqs are: temporarily closed
catch.
opla!zoro; 9,224 words; fem!reader, no "y/n", slowburn, disgruntled companions?? to lovers, fluff and banter, so much banter, nicknames ("kitten", "pretty boy"), semi canon-compliant, tiny bit post!opla, more plot than not
summary: zoro calls reader "kitten", reader calls him "pretty boy" back. story ensues.
a/n: ha. i have no excuses for this... it's not a series/multipart, but i do hope that the sheer length of it kinda makes up for that lol; tagging @dira333 and @bby-deerling
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The first time he sees you, it is over daggers and bared teeth, a hiss working up your throat as you glare at him from the balcony of Kaya’s expansive estate.
“You’re gonna need a lot more than that, kitten.” Zoro’s smirk goes slanted as you leap off the thin railings to land noiselessly before him, your curved daggers striking against the edge of his swords with a metallic spray of sparks.
His smirk fades after that, replaced by a wild, jagged grin as he swings both swords around his body in a wide arc — but you’re backflipping up, too high in the air to be fully natural, your feet landing perfectly on the backs of his blades before you’re kicking off again, forcing the blades down and throwing him off balance.
“I highly doubt it,” you bite out, skimming by his cheek with a savage smile as he jerks to the side just in time to avoid having his face split open. But you whip back around and it’s all he can do to parry your blow.
The discordant clang of metal on metal rings out in the otherwise silent room as you both flicker around each other, him as steady as the tide, you as quick as the flutter of a sparrow’s wing.
“Where was that fake butler hiding you, kitten? You’re much better than those other two —” Zoro grunts as he narrows his eyes, digging in his heels as he parries another flurry of your quicksilver blows. Your lips curl in contempt as you swipe for his stomach and catch on the edge of his white-hilted blade.
“He wasn’t hiding me anywhere —”
The world blurs in a whirlwind of flashing metal — it ends with you hissing as you find you and Zoro on opposite ends of the cavernous room, amidst wood splinters and slivers of shredded upholstery. There’s a thin slash oozing blood down the side of his face and a long gash along your arm where his sword had nicked your bicep.
“Then why’re you with him?” Zoro asks, grimacing as he wipes blood from his cheek.
“Because, pretty boy,” you smirk at the way his eyes narrow, “the old tomcat owes me something. And I never forget a debt.”
Zoro’s eyebrow quirks, and for a single second, you can see the cogs turning behind his darkened eyes, “So… you’re only with him until he pays you.”
You grin, Cheshire wide, and a second later, you’re right in front of him, pressing up into his personal space with a finger trailing up the length of his neck. Zoro’s breath catches, and he’s acutely aware of just how open he’d been, how easily you might’ve decided to end his life had you replaced your finger with the tip of one of your curve-bellied daggers.
“That… and I happen to enjoy slicing things up, y’see…” your voice is syrup sweet and sharp as poison even as he jerks away from you, instinct thrusting his swords forward before he can stop himself. But you’re already dancing away with a soft, ringing laugh, shaking your head.
“Gonna have to be faster than that if you wanna catch me… pretty boy.”
You slink into the shadows, giggling even as Zoro grimaces and tries to chase after you, slashing at whispers and shapes in the dark. He makes it all the way down the hallway before Luffy’s voice catches his attention and he doubles back with a final look over his shoulder, an unsatisfied knot tied tight in his stomach.
The second time you meet, it’s over a barrel of dried sardines.
“We pick up another stray?” Zoro asks, frowning as you grin cheekily down at him from the bow of the Merry. He could imagine the way your ears might flick if you had them, the way your invisible tail might twitch from side to side, snide and all too satisfied.
“Yeah! Didn’t I tell you? She’s coming with us!” Luffy grins wide as he climbs up onto their new ship, giving you a hard pat on the back, “Welcome to the Straw Hat Crew!”
“Thanks, Cap!” you smile, slipping off the railings to help with the extra supplies.
Nami sighs as she joins Zoro on the docks, “Sad, desperate souls, like I said — but hey, at least she helped us escape.”
Zoro frowns, “She did?”
Nami rolls her eyes, “Who do you think undid all those locks on the metal shutters from the outside? Geez…”
Zoro grunts, catching another barrel of dried food as Nami tosses it up toward him.
After that, things… do not get better. You’re too quiet, too quick, and Zoro can never quite tell when you mean what you say or if you ever say what you mean. Your laughter sends shivers down his back, and he finds himself watching you, even when he doesn’t mean to.
By the time you’ve all reached the Baratie, it’s become second nature for him to keep his eyes trained on you, to take stock of where you are, to seek you out the first thing after he wakes and the last thing before he sleeps.
“Ah — apologies madam I didn’t see you there —” Sanji smarms as Nami’s eyebrows inch up her forehead. You bite back a grin as Zoro scoffs to your right.
“And… for you?” when Sanji finally turns his eyes onto you, you’re ready for him, leaning forward, your tongue slipping languorously across your bottom lip as you peer up at him from beneath your thick lashes.
“Got any Déesse? Ah, but you must have — an establishment as fine as this?”
Sanji takes a long breath; Zoro feels the air turn sour in his lungs.
“Of course we do — a woman of taste, hm? And… for the rest of you?” Sanji’s voice flatlines as he looks over the rest of the crew.
Zoro snorts, rolling his eyes, “A beer for me and… a few for my friends.”
Sanji shoots a curt nod his way before recounting the table’s orders, “A few beers, a milk —” he dips his head in Luffy’s direction, “a normal water in a normal glass,” a smile at Nami, “and… a bottle of Déesse — any preference on year, miss?” He twinkles in your direction.
“Oh… surprise me.”
Sanji sweeps into a theatrical bow, “Right away,” before gliding away from the table.
Everyone starts talking all at once —
“Why’re you ‘miss’ but I’m ‘madam?’”
“Great fighter, that guy — did you see him roundhouse that other guy in the face —”
“Wow… don’t tell me that worked on you?” Zoro scoffs as he turns to look at you.
You shrug, “Sometimes, it pays to meet people on their level, hm?” Then, your smile turns saccharine as you tilt your head, eyes flickering towards the triplet of swords caught in the small gap between the plush seats and the pillar to Zoro’s right.
“Right. Whatever.” His lip curls. Nami sighs, leaning her head back against the studded velvet seat backs.
“The two of you are gonna be the death of us…” she muses, laughing as you curl back into your seat with an exaggerated pout and Zoro ticks his tongue against his teeth, feeling heat crest up into his cheeks.
And later, it’s you who tries the hardest to talk him out of his duel with Mihawk, a dull, feline glint to your eyes as you glare at him from across the wide kitchen counter —
“You couldn’t even beat me in single combat — what makes you think you’d be able to best Dracule Mihawk, huh?!”
Zoro snarls as he rounds on you, “It’s not like I was really trying.”
“Seemed like you were doing a lot more than trying to me!”
“You were the one who ran away.”
“Yeah, because I didn’t have a death wish!”
“So you admit that you would’ve lost to me.”
Your eyes narrow into slits as you hiss, “Yes, just like you’ll lose if you go through with this.”
A muscle feathers in Zoro’s jaw as he slowly peels his eyes away from you and turns back to the methodical work of polishing his swords.
Later that night, you find him sitting in the Merry’s kitchen with his eyes closed, arms crossed, his swords lined up just so on the suspended table in front of him.
“You can stop sulking. I know you’re there.” He opens a single eye to peer at you as you melt out of the shadows near the door, your own arms knitted tight across your chest.
“Shouldn’t you be sleeping?”
“I’m meditating.” His eyes slip back closed.
You leap deftly onto the table and cross your legs, looking down at his row of swords.
“You’ll need more than a good meditation session to beat that old hawk.”
Zoro’s eyes snap open, his words taking on a hard, metallic edge, “What would you know about it?”
Your grin is crescent moon sharp as you tilt your head; you reach forward as if to tap a finger against the sheath of one of his swords. There’s a dull thump as Zoro makes to tug the sword away, but a second later, you’ve got his wrist pinned to the table’s marred surface. Your face is half an inch away from his and he can taste the heat of your breath on his lips.
“See? Not nearly fast enough,” you tut, still grinning as Zoro yanks his arm away.
“If you’re trying to change my mind, you’re doin’ a shit job.”
“No,” you sigh, jumping off the table, your feet eerily silent as always. You make it all the way to the door before turning to glance at Zoro over your shoulder. There’s an inscrutable look on his face as he watches you, and you allow him one last, little smile.
“I just… thought you should be well-rested for your own execution.”
The next morning dawns too bright, too early, the sky too blue and perfect. It’s a blood-hungry day, so your grandmother used to say, the kind of day that aches for disaster. You shiver as you walk silently behind Usopp and Luffy, trailing in Zoro’s shadow as he makes his solemn way to the docks to face Mihawk.
There’s a quick exchange of words before Mihawk’s eyes slide onto you; the faint upward tick of his eyebrow is the only indication you get that he recognizes you. But then, he’s cocking his head, and musing aloud —
“They say it’s good luck to have a cat on a pirate ship, but I’m afraid this one won’t do you any good today, Roronoa Zoro.”
“Oh god… he’s really doing this, isn’t he?” Nami’s hand slips into yours, squeezing tight, her voice nothing more than a terrified whisper.
You give a brief nod, squeezing back. On your other side, Usopp swallows hard, but Luffy doesn’t seem all that worried.
It’s a quick, brutal, and decisive fight, but you watch as Mihawk pulls back at the last second, Yoru slicing through the air, much slower and softer than you knew it could. Nevertheless, Zoro’s blood splatters the creaking wood beams below as he collapses. You feel your lungs slowly calcifying as everyone rushes to Zoro’s side but you stand there, frozen, the world tunneling around you, the wild thumping of your heart echoing in your ears as Mihawk slates you a single look before turning and strolling off back toward the Baratie.
You slip away in the chaos of everyone trying to get Zoro back onto the ship.
“Come to seek revenge for your little boyfriend?” Mihawk asks, casually leaning up against the near-empty bar in the Baratie’s mouth.
“He’s not my boyfriend,” you reply, voice clipped. Your fingers are curled into fists at your side, nails digging into the flesh of your palms. Mihawk gives you a single once-over before tutting.
“I see you’ve been sharpening your claws.”
“I see you haven’t,” you bite back. Mihawk rolls his eyes.
“Dear, dear — if even you’ve noticed something then I really am getting rusty. Though it has been hard to find a good sparring partner ever since Shanks lost his arm. Careless man.”
“Why’d you really let him live?”
Mihawk pauses in his rather thorough inspection of his nails to look up at you, lips twitching.
“I meant what I said — the world needs a few more wildcards and… I have a feeling he’ll be coming to find me soon enough.”
“You don’t take on students.” You don’t quite manage to keep the bitterness from your voice even as Mihawk shrugs.
“Just because I haven’t before, doesn’t mean I won’t ever. Now run along — I think your little swordsman friend might need some help, hm?”
You open your mouth to argue, but you hear the distinct sounds of Luffy’s voice echoing out from the kitchen, high and desperate, followed by the base rumble of Zeff’s voice. You slink into the kitchen between the flapping doors, watching as Sanji scrambles to gather Zeff’s knives.
“I’ll get the fish,” you offer, making nearly everyone jump as you reach for the freezer box.
No one has the time to ask any more questions as Luffy leads the way back to the Merry.
Nami’s eyes are wide and over-bright when you set the yellowtail on the table next to Zeff, and the whole room watches with bated breath as the old chef starts to work. Wordlessly, you tug out the large curved needles and place them at his elbow. He spares you a grateful grunt as he grabs them.
You take three steps back, letting out a long breath as you press your back to the cool wood of the doorframe, watching as Zeff stitches Zoro back together.
You spend the next two and a half days curled up in the small chair next to Nami’s bed, dozing every so often, at other times humming, or keeping still as Nami, Usopp, and Luffy take their turns next to Zoro’s sleeping form as well. You’re reciting a childhood nursery rhyme when Zoro finally wakes up.
“I thought cats were supposed to be quiet…”
“— and all the king's horses and all the king’s men — oh… you’re awake.”
“What about the king’s horses and men?” Zoro’s voice is thick and gravelly from disuse, but there’s that familiar twist to his mouth as he turns slightly to blink blearily up at you.
“It… it doesn’t matter — I should go tell Luffy —”
“No, finish the story, kitten.”
Your voice catches in your chest, and after a second, you sigh, dropping back into your seat with a resigned little laugh.
“All the king’s horses and all the king’s men… couldn’t put Humpty back together again.”
Zoro hums, “Wow, cheerful little kitten, aren’t you? You always pick such nice things to say at a sick person’s bedside?”
“No, just the ones that really deserve it.”
Zoro laughs, the sound a base rumble that makes him wince, his hand shooting up to clutch at his chest. You lurch forward, catching yourself before you actually touch him, hovering there as Zoro opens his eyes and a strained sort of silence thickens in the air around you.
Like this, you’re acutely aware of the heat rising off of Zoro’s skin, the fact that his shirt is still pulled open to accommodate the thick bandages wrapped around his torso, the taut skin of his stomach, flexing as he takes in shallow breaths. Like this, you can count the freckles scattered across the bridge of his nose and see the pinprick black holes threatening to take over his eyes as they dilate.
It isn’t till you both hear the clatter of footsteps and Usopp flings himself into the room that you jerk back, blinking as Usopp gasps for breath, gesticulating wildly, rambling about Luffy and fishmen and a fight that’s broken out at the Baratie.
You glance down at Zoro, who sighs, letting his eyes fall shut.
“Go.”
“You stay put.”
“Right, like I’m goin’ anywhere anytime soon.”
Zoro grunts, and you spare him one more sharp look before following after Usopp.
Three days later finds you all back at sea, with a newly minted member in tow, chasing after Nami’s shadow.
It does not take long to track her down, and when you do, the fight is — if not quick, then at least decisive. You’re not the only one who notices the stiffness in Zoro’s limbs as everyone eats and drinks their way through a whole night of merry-making.
“Back for seconds — must’ve liked it!” Sanji crows, slapping another spoonful of food onto Zoro’s plate.
“It was okay.”
“That plate says different.”
“Not hungry?” you jump slightly at Nami’s voice, and you lift your eyes just in time to see her eyebrows kick up. She cocks them at you before settling down by your side.
“Not often that you’re caught off guard — something must really be bothering you.” You can hear the edge of forced lightness in her voice, and your eyes flicker to the fresh bandage on right arm.
Events of the past few days flash behind your eyes and you cast her a small grin.
“Just thinking…”
“Sounds like trouble.”
“It does seem to follow me around, doesn’t it?”
Nami regards you with a curious look before scoffing, “Don’t you mean ‘us’?”
You frown, turning towards her. She slates you a glance before darting her eyes back to the party.
“In case you haven’t noticed… ‘Trouble’s kind of our middle name. If you don’t like it, then…”
Her voice trails off then, and the playful smile flickers like a flame caught in a sudden gust of wind. You press your lips.
“Never said I don’t like it.” You return her smile and see her firelight catch again.
“C’mon then — no more sitting around —” you let yourself be pulled to your feet, the pair of you stumbling towards the large bonfire where several of the villagers are strumming at battered instruments, though the music they make is no less brilliant for it.
“Ah, now there’s a sight for sore eyes,” Sanji says, tapping a bit of ash off a freshly lit cigarette as Zoro scrapes the final bites of food from his plate.
“Hn.” But his gaze lingers on the light-caught shape of you, a black dress hugging the curves of your waist and the bend of your hip, cascading out as you spin beneath Nami’s arm. There’s a softness about you he’s never seen before — something more than the damnable feline grace with which you fought or the steel-lined quickness and skill that forever nipped at his heels like a hungry dog, reminding him that he still had so much more to master, to learn — no, this is something else entirely.
Something lissome and light, something tantantalizing and sweet.
Something… lovely.
And it stirs something inside him too — something not at all sweet and light, though… no less tantalizing.
A semi-inebriated Nojiko manages to pull Sanji into the fray, and a moment later, you glance over to meet his eyes. A line catches then, hooked from the center of his chest to the dark, mesmerizing flash of your eyes, Zoro feels himself tipping forward.
Until he actually is, and there’s a bottle being pressed into his hand by a stranger he doesn’t even glance at.
He finds himself at your side, somehow, everyone spinning around the bonfire like marionettes on a massive stage, his limbs loose and a smile tugging wide his lips. At some point, he thinks he might’ve felt your hands in his, but then again, waking up the next morning face down in a pile of hay, a headache pounding behind his eyes, he thinks it’s probably just his imagination.
They set course for the Grand Line proper then, and everyone settles into a kind of routine. Though despite everyone’s initial protests, Zoro can be seen at the bow of the ship every sunrise and sundown, running through katas, grunting and wincing occasionally when his wound threatens to reopen, at which point you’d appear like a vague, disgruntled shadow, and shoo him back to bed.
“I’ll never best Mihawk if I don’t get better —”
“Exactly.” You pin him with a hard look; he can almost see your hackles rising as he huffs and slumps down into his hammock. You relax slightly, perched atop a rather precarious pile of barrels, but Zoro knows better than to doubt your balance.
“You’ll never beat him if you don’t get better first,” you repeat, narrowing your eyes as Zoro scoffs, pointedly twisting to face the other way. The ship rocks the hammock to and fro, and after a while, Zoro feels himself drifting off into that ever-familiar limbo of half-sleep, his mind wandering through the avenues of his memories, images coming in watercolor flashes, seeping into his vision.
“Tell me something,” he says, his voice low, his eyes still closed.
“Hm?” you barely make a noise, but he feels your presence in the corner of his room, has memorized the specific size and shape and weight of you such that he could pick you out of a moving crowd with his eyes closed, his face turned the other way.
“What do you want to know?”
“You had plenty of stories when I was unconscious — don’t you have more?”
For a moment, you don’t speak, and the silence is filled by the rhythmic creaking of wood, the soft splash of water against the ship’s hull, the occasional cry of seabirds, and the dull, muffled sounds of laughter and conversation from above deck.
“Once upon a time, a kitten was left by the roadside in a tiny village by her mother, who was sick and didn’t have enough milk to feed all her children, but it just so happens that a great big hawk was soaring overhead and took a liking to the kitten. The hawk picked her up in his great talons and brought her to a castle on an island, surrounded by thorns and briars and the most beautiful roses the kitten had ever seen. There, the hawk set her the task of hunting down mice so he himself could go after bigger, juicier prey — for you see, the hawk had long dreamed of becoming the greatest hunter in the whole wide world.”
At this, Zoro shifts to turn back towards you, peering open one eye to watch as you leaned back against the wall of the small storeroom he’d claimed as his own, one of your knees propped up, your arm hanging loosely over it, your other leg dangling down over the side of your barrel, your heel occasionally knocking against the wood with gentle little thumps.
You take a deep breath and glance down at him, a sad, faraway look in your eyes as you continue —
“Eventually, the kitten got very good at catching mice — she grew faster, stealthier, learned to sharpen her claws and teeth, learned to hide amongst the beautiful roses in the garden until the mice grew complacent before she struck. But no matter how much she begged, the hawk would never let her hunt bigger things. And then one day… the hawk took her up in his giant claws again and tossed her onto the beach — told her that there was nothing more he could teach her, and that she ought to find her own way in the world.”
You sigh, shaking your head, “What a liar…” you murmur, almost to yourself as you lower your eyes to your hands, “he never really taught me anything…”
And this time, it’s Zoro who remains silent, letting the quiet seep through the floorboards like the thick, morning mists, rising off of the water’s surface before the sun bakes it all away.
Then, he swings himself off the hammock and makes for the door. Before he can reach it, you’re in front of him, blocking his path with a bright glint in your eyes and a challenge in your smile.
“I’ve rested,” he says, plainly, taking half a step back.
“You’ll never get better like this —”
“Exactly,” he throws the word back in your face before sighing and looking away, “so… help me.”
You blink, staring up at him as he stares right back at you.
“Help you how?” You resist the urge to look away, swallow down the bitterness crawling up the back of your throat — I can’t even help myself —
“Mihawk trained you —”
“No,” you spit out, your shoulders tensing as you glare up at Zoro, “he didn’t — he did everything in his power not to —”
“Tch — you lived with him on that island and he trusted you with keeping the — the mice away —” a vein ticks in Zoro’s jaw as you watch him stare down at you, your heart thumping warm and wild in your chest, “just because he didn’t personally hold your hand and teach you his technique… doesn’t mean he wasn’t training you in his own way.”
You swallow hard.
“So what? It’s not like I can ever beat him.”
“You might. Or I might. If we help each other.”
You ball your fingers into fists, “What makes you think either of us stands a chance against him?”
At this, Zoro’s smile goes slanted — a raw, wild, blood-beat thing.
“Because I’ve seen you fight and I think you’re good. And… I know I’m good. Or at least, I know I’ll get there.”
There’s a certain quicksilver edge to the shape of his words that makes you look up, your eyes meeting his like the colliding cores of two tidally locked stars — something terrible and magnificent, a catastrophe of gravity and inevitability.
Your mind spins and for a second, you can almost see it, that distant future in which Roronoa Zoro becomes the best, better — even — than the best. The greatest in the world. You lean back, your gaze appraising.
“Tell you what — if you get good enough to catch me once… I’ll take you to him.”
Zoro frowns, “What do you mean?”
Your grin quirks and you lilt your head, “Exactly what it sounds like — you get fast enough to catch me, and catch me properly then… I’ll take you to his island.”
Zoro stares. And then, his own grin stretches to match yours.
“Deal.”
Things change after that, the mornings and evenings no longer finding Zoro alone at the bow of the ship, but always with the shape of you flickering around him, the bright, hungry gleam of sun on steel flashing around you.
“Too slow —” you gasp, dodging beneath one of his swipes as he grunts and swings downward, nearly catching the tips of your hair as you spin away.
“But — you’re getting there,” you grin, holding up a hand as you lean back against the side of the Merry, your other hand pressed to your chest.
“Outta breath, kitten?” Zoro asks, smirking as he slowly sheaths his sword, sweat glistening along the planes and grooves of his chest.
“Hardly.” You flick him a disapproving look but there’s a tiny smile that threatens the corner of your mouth as he scoffs, reaching for a rag to dab at his forehead. You can’t help the way your eyes linger on the strong, sturdy ripples of muscles that flex along his back and shoulders as he straightens up either, and when he catches you staring, it’s all you can do to hold his gaze.
You don’t give him a chance to gloat. Instead, you swing your knives around your fingers and cast him a grin.
“Breakfast,” you say.
“Mm,” he agrees, just as Nami comes padding up onto the main deck, stifling a yawn and squinting at you both with a mildly disgusted look on her face.
“How the hell are you guys up so damn early all the time?”
“Ah, they say that cats are diurnal creatures — so they’re most awake at dawn and at dusk. As for the moss-head… I’ve heard that idiots don’t need as much sleep. Not as much brain to rest, y’know?” Sanji remarks, smirking as he brushes by Nami with a wink.
Zoro scoffs, wiping off his blade with a rough cloth, “It’s called bettering yourself. Not that you’d know what it means. All this time and your congee’s still runny as f —”
“Says the guy who can’t tell the difference between sunny side up and scrambled eggs —”
You sigh, ducking around the squabbling pair with a long, sinuous stretch.
“So… how goes the sparring, hm?” Nami asks, her voice dripping with innuendo as she follows you into the kitchen, her sleep-blurred eyes now sharp, her grin moon-sly and teasing.
“It goes,” you say, opening a cupboard and rummaging around for anything that catches your eye.
“I see… and is it going somewhere in particular?” Nami drapes herself across the long couch, her eyes tracking you as you move from cupboard to cupboard, and finally stopping in front of the fridge.
You hoist yourself up onto the suspended table, a glass of milk in your hands, “Depends on where this particular place is.”
Nami shrugs, “Dunno… just seems like Zoro’s spending a lot of time following you around like a lost little puppy these days. When was the last time he’s left you alone for more than say —” Nami makes a show of checking her watch, “15 minutes?”
“We’re just training together — and he doesn’t follow me around all the time —” but even as the words leave your mouth, Zoro ducks into the kitchen, his eyes skipping from you to Nami and back again.
“Waiter said we’re on our own for breakfast.”
“I’m good with milk.” You hold up your glass even as Nami snickers and Zoro nods, rummaging through a few cupboards until he pulls out a bag of jerky. At this, Nami’s eyes slingshot between the pair of you one last time before she sighs dramatically and saunters back out of the room, muttering something about conning Sanji into making proper breakfast.
The quiet twines around your ankles, soft and familiar. Zoro leans against the counter, the small bag of jerky untouched as he watches you sip at your milk. Heat curls along the curve of your spine as you feel the weight of his eyes tracking your lips, the bright pink flash of your tongue.
You swallow.
So does he.
“You’re getting faster.”
“You’re getting stronger.”
Your words overlap like the pages of a book, flipped through too fast.
You blink, and then — laughter. Your’s startled and shy, his soft and… you turn just fast enough to catch him duck his head the other way, shoving his hand into the bag of jerky. He clears his throat.
“Thanks.”
“What for?” you work to press some of your usual purr back into your voice, but it sounds strange and tinny in the wane morning light.
“For…” Zoro hesitates, and for a second, you find yourself leaning into the smooth weight of his voice, as if you might be able to catch his next words in the palm of your hands like bruised fruit.
“Alright — outta my kitchen, mosshead — lovely ladies like these should always start the day with a well-balanced meal.”
Sanji kicks open the door and Zoro glares. You’re already hopping off the counter, quiet as starlight, grinning behind Sanji’s back even as Zoro sighs.
“It’s not your kitchen, waiter. I’ve got as much right to be in here as you do.”
You try to slip away but Nami’s hand darts out to catch your wrist.
“Not so fast… kitten.”
Your entire face flushes at the word.
“I don’t know what you’re —”
Nami’s satisfied smile is more Cheshire than cat but you allow her to drag you up to the bow of the ship, half-concealed by her tangerine trees. Up here, the air tastes briny and sweet with morning air. Up here, you have you squint against the sea’s shattered glass light, cast up towards the dawning sky.
Nami leans against the railing and casts her eyes out towards the distant horizon. There’s always been a sun-kissed quality about her, the brilliant orange of her hair, the darkening patches of freckles scattered across her nose-bridge. You let her press her arm to yours and feel the warmth and soft of her skin.
“So. Zoro, huh?”
You sigh, looking down towards the dark emerald of the waves below. You watch as the water froths against the ship’s hull, peeling away in roils of white lace.
“A little cliche, if you ask me — y’know, the swordsman and the knife-girl? But… I guess it makes sense.” There’s a lightness to her voice that makes you laugh, a solidness to her words that makes you powerless to contest them.
“They say it’s good to have hobbies in common,” you offer, hoping to match the playfulness in her voice. Nami chuckles, making a noise at the back of her throat.
“Oh yeah, I bet ‘bodycount’ means something totally different to the two of you, huh?”
You let a real laugh break though then, your head tipping back and reveling in the sound. The rapidly rising sun casts everything in a dreamy, slant-wise glow — golden hour, you think you’ve heard it called. But you wonder if it’s might just be more amber than gold, standing here, laughing with Nami, you feel for the first time, a weight shift and slip from your shoulders. Like shedding a thick coat after a long day’s travel.
Then, the light shifts, a thin fog of clouds dulling out the sun’s light as Nami fixes you with her too-sharp eyes.
“He’s going after Mihawk, isn’t he?”
You sober as well, wetting your lips. “Eventually, yeah.”
“And… you’re helping him.”
You nod.
Nami sighs, dropping her chin onto a the heel of her hand.
“You… really think he can do it? Beat Mihawk?”
You take your time scanning the horizon. Without the transcendent glow of the rising sun, the waves are cooler, darker, and you know better than most the monsters lurking just beneath the surface.
“Mihawk’s only human,” you say. To which Nami scoffs.
“Right. That makes it loads better.”
You instinctively reach for where you knives would be, the empty loops on your belt like a persistent itch in your fingertips.
“At least it means he bleeds red just like the rest of us.”
Nami nods as you push away from the rails, retracing your steps into the kitchen where you’d left your knives.
Sanji is halfway through grilling mackerel with a steaming pot of miso soup bubbling on the stove. He gives you a wink and a knowing grin as you wander in, jerking his chin towards the hanging table where Zoro is running an oiled cloth along the length of his sword.
“In case you were lookin’ for your knives,” Sanji’s voice is silken tofu smooth as he turns back to his cooking.
Zoro doesn’t look up as you reach for your knives, laid out perfectly, already cleaned and oiled.
“I was doing mine anyway,” Zoro says, by way of an explanation.
You smirk, reaching out to tuck each one into its spot on your belt.
“Thanks, pretty boy, altruism looks good on you.”
You slink from the room before you can hear Sanji’s witty taunt or Zoro’s biting retort, a satisfied heat stirring steady at the base of your stomach.
The languorous days slip into sun-soaked weeks, and though it takes longer than anyone would’ve liked for Zoro’s wound to heal, it does. And the scar, well —
“I think it looks awesome!” Luffy says, clapping Zoro on the shoulder as you tug away the gauze to inspect the long thin strip of puckered skin, a few shades lighter than the rest of Zoro’s chest.
“Yeah, real… manly-like,” Usopp adds, arms folded, leaning against the far wall, fighting an expression between impressed slightly queasy. He backpedals immediately as Zoro casts him a dark look.
“N-not that you’re not real or manly already or anything like that! It just uh — adds to the allure, y’know?”
Nami makes a face, “Yeah, I don’t know about allure…”
Sanji grunts.
“When did this become a museum exhibit?” Zoro snaps, frowning at the entire crew, gathered around him as you unstick the last of the bandages from his now healed stomach.
“We just wanted to make sure you were alright, Zoro!” Luffy says, rummaging around for a snack now that he’s satisfied his first mate is properly healed.
“I’ve been fine for weeks,” Zoro says flatly as Usopp joins Luffy and Sanji wanders towards the window to let out a puff of smoke.
“Can you lean back a bit — I think it’s still not completely healed by your —” you frown as you try to press Zoro back, your palm splaying against his stomach as your free hand traces at the waistband of his pants towards where the large gash tapers into his right hip.
Zoro hisses between his teeth and the room goes deathly quiet.
You look up to find everyone staring, and then half a second later Nami leaps to her feet, talking loudly about a part of the East Blue map she wants to finish, Usopp stuttering after her about checking the knots on the main mast, and Sanji dragging Luffy by the scruff of the neck, insisting that they set up the fishing lines for the day.
The door slams behind Luffy and somehow, the room feels more full than it had been just a few seconds prior. The silence pulses between you, thick and pitched and expanding.
You clear your throat delicately, lowering your eyes back to the task at hand, doing your best to ignore the uncomfortable heat now creeping up the back of your neck.
“Can you —”
Zoro leans back wordlessly, propping his arms against the table, his hips shifting forward to allow you access.
You gently tug down the material of his waistband several inches to reveal the tip of the wound, still a bit raw and red, possibly from the friction of his clothes, or just his general lack of regard for his own recovery.
“Yeah, it’s still not all —” your voice cuts off as you look up to find Zoro staring, and the burgeoning hunger you find there stills your heart in your chest. It’s a strange, base, animal thing, caught in the swirling darkness of his irises, but he holds his breath, and so you do yours —
“Healed…” you swallow hard, reaching for the thick, pungent balm sitting by his left hand.
With slow, methodic movements, you uncap the balm and dip your finger into the sticky surface, reaching forward to run the tip along the soft redness of Zoro’s skin. Thinking back later, you might’ve been thankful for the sharp herbal fragrance of the balm to distract you from the deeper, muskier smell of Zoro’s skin, salted as it always is with sea and sweat, tempered with the unmistakable scent of steel.
But right then, all you can think about is the sharp cut of his hipbone as it slants down, and down, and —
You pull back when you’re done, making to wipe your hand on a piece of washcloth when Zoro catches your wrist in one smooth movement, pulling you up till you’re chest to chest, your body slotted between his spread open legs.
“Zoro, what —”
“Caught you —” His voice is nothing more than a whisper, but you feel it rumbling through his chest to yours.
“— You’re losing your touch.”
You narrow your eyes, “Not a chance — I was distracted, that’s not fair —”
You try to tug your wrist away only for him to tighten his grip. A fist-like something clenches inside your stomach along with his fingers. Fire licks at the base of your belly before climbing up your spine.
“Hn. All’s fair.”
You watch in near slow motion as his eyes flick down to your lips and back up again; you’re helpless to do else but mirror the movement. With your wrist still caught in his grasp, it’s almost too easy for him to pull you forward, to tip you into him till you’re nearly spilling over, till you’re scrambling back with half-caught breaths and wide eyes and your other palm pressing firmly to his chest, where you can feel the fluttering beats of his own heart caught just beneath your touch.
“I-if you’re gonna make a move, at least wait till I’ve finished wiping off my hands,” the words come tumbling out, more a reflex than anything else, but it makes Zoro blink and lean back just a few inches. His grip on you eases ever so slightly, and you tug your wrist from his grasp, expecting him to snap to, to jerk away, to blush or apologize, but instead, all he does is watch you mutely wipe at your hands with those dark, hungry eyes.
When you’ve finished, he quirks an eyebrow as if waiting for you to make the next move.
At this, you huff, rolling your eyes, “Come on*,* pretty boy — you can’t expect me to dress your wounds and make the first —”
The kiss is quick and searing and over all too fast, as most first kisses are. The second kiss is more patient, a slow easing in, a teasing of lips and and a testing of tongues. The third is breathless, hedging on urgent. The fourth — well the fourth is cut short by Zoro pressing his forehead to yours, the both of you panting.
“Wh — what the hell was that?” you ask, gulping down great lungfuls of breath as Zoro scoffs.
“C’mon kitten, don’t go gettin’ shy on me now…” Zoro smirks even as you lean forward to try and nip at his bottom lip, eyes flashing. He tilts your mouth back to his, and words are lost for a few more moments before you find them again.
“Who said anything about getting shy? I just wanted an explanation.”
Zoro makes an abortive noise at the back of his throat as you nose into the place under his jaw and graze your teeth along the skin there.
“C-can’t a guy say thanks for someone dressing his wounds?”
You pull back with a soft hiss and a sly smile; it’s the first time you’ve ever heard him stutter.
“Don’t tell me this is how you’ve been thanking all your savoirs. I’ll have to go compare notes with Zeff —”
At this, Zoro grunts, wincing slightly as your belt presses against the inside of his hip where his wound is still raw. You pull away, startled.
“Sorry — I didn’t —”
“Hey.”
Zoro tugs you back with soft hands and an even softer smile, “Not sure I liked having you talk about Zeff while we were…”
You break him off with a helpless laugh and he joins you a second later. And then, before either of you can say more, Usopp’s voice echoes down from above deck.
“Land ho! Land ho!”
You glance back at Zoro, who slips off the table and has the decency to rearrange his clothes. You share a meaningful look before trying to pull away but Zoro once again catches your wrist.
This time, his lips are set and his eyes are just a tad bit harder than before.
“Don’t forget, kitten, you still owe me an island.”
You pause, peering at him beneath half-lidded eyes as your head lists first to one side, and then the other.
His eyes track yours before ticking down to your lips once more, where your tongue traces a path his own had run along not so long ago.
“You should know by now, pretty boy, that I never forget my debts.”
And just like that, your wrist slips from between his fingers, and Zoro’s left with nothing more than the taste of your mouth and the flicker of your shadow as he steps into the dim hallway.
Loguetown is a bustling place, a bleached button pressed into the chest of the East Blue, bright as a Marine’s new uniform. People blow through like fall leaves on the wayward wind and ships of all shapes and sizes dot every bit of tangible coast, their masts foresting the skyline until it’s barely visible from the docks.
“Need new swords,” Zoro announces as the crew all gather on the creaky boardwalk.
“Same. Could do with a few more knives,” you nod.
Nami tuts, rolling her eyes, “Well I’m getting a new wardrobe.”
“I’m gonna get some lunch!” Luffy grins widely as Sanji sighs, digging in his pockets for a fresh light.
“Looks like we’re stuck with the grocery shopping,” he says, nudging Usopp.
“Uh… I was actually gonna go check out some tech shops to find some parts for…” Usopp trails off as Sanji pins him with a look before shrugging, “Or… I mean, I don’t mind doing groceries first and then looking for parts.”
“Good man!” Sanji smiles, clapping him on the back as he frog-marches Usopp towards the market.
“No getting into fights, got it?” Nami looks between you and Zoro, “we need to be discreet.”
You bat your lashes, “Us? Never! We’ll be sweet and soft as kangaroos.”
Nami frowns, “Wait — kangaroos aren’t —”
You laugh, flouncing off towards town, “Never said they were!”
Zoro sighs before following after.
“It’s not your first time here,” he says after a while. It’s not a question, so you don’t provide an answer, contenting yourself with looking around at all the new shop fronts that had popped up since you were last here, and all the old haunts that have been here since what you’re sure is the inception of time itself.
“Where are we going?” he asks after several more minutes of turning down seemingly random streets.
You flash him a grin, “I know a place.”
When you duck into the arms shop, Ipponmatsu glances up from over his bulbous nose before doing a double-take. His eyes narrow to slits.
“You! You nearly robbed me blind the last time you were here! Get —”
Drop a bag of clinking Berry into one of the sword bins with a feline smirk, drawing a long finger against the hilt of some unnamed blade.
“There. That should set us even. And… you did try to swindle me first. Plus, I’m here on proper business today — my friend is in the market for some swords.”
Ipponmatsu’s eyes remain slits, but his fingers twitch as he edges toward the bin, snatching the sack from it and clutching it to his chest.
Zoro glances around at the various blades hung and displayed around the surprisingly spacious shop. The distinct unctuous tone of your voice doesn’t go unnoticed by the shopkeeper, but he seems too distracted by the sack of Berry to snipe any further.
“Well,” Ipponmatsu gruffs after a few more seconds, ��I’m watchin’ you… oh…” his eyes slide from you to Zoro and then to the Wadou Ichimonji at his side. Zoro almost feels the man’s jaw go slack for a second before he slams it back into place.
“E-esteemed swordsman, sir! That blade — at your side — if I might just take a look —”
You’re perched on the cashier’s counter faster than either of them can blink, one leg crossed over the other, feet hanging idly off the side, a palm pinning Ipponmatsu’s greedy hand to the surface, an almost bored expression on your face as you squint down at his fingers.
“Hm… don’t they say that swordsmen ought to take good care of their hands? I could feed a whole family of mice with the dead skin of your cuticles.”
Ipponmatsu yelps and tries to jerk free but your hold is firm, and Zoro has to fight down the amused grin twitching at the edge of his mouth. He’s felt first hand how strong your grip can be, how unnervingly quick the pressure is there, slicing off circulation with the precision of a blade.
“W-what do you want?!” the shopkeeper looks wildly between the pair of you.
You shrug, “Like I said, we’re in the market for some swords. I’d just like to make sure we keep all the dealings above water, hm?”
Ipponmatsu glares at you for a second longer before all the fight goes out of him and he slumps against the counter.
“Oh, alright alright! Look at the damned swords — it’s just… you’ve got a mighty good blade there. You’d do well not to lose it, ” he jerks his chin towards Zoro’s blade, “or get it stolen,” his eyes flash back to where you’re now cheerfully perusing a collection of knives in the far corner, the space you’d inhabited on the cashier’s counter static with your absence.
Ipponmatsu rubs as his wrist. Zoro nods.
“Yeah. I know.”
“Don’t worry — I’ve got no interest in katana’s. I prefer more subtlety myself.” You swing a pair of serrated claw knives around your fingers as if testing them for weight before putting them back.
All in all, it takes half an hour, a cursed blade, and some groveling on Ipponmatsu’s part before you and Zoro stroll out of the arms shop with two brand new katanas strapped to his side, and a fresh set of throwing needles tucked into your belt.
You take off in a random direction and Zoro follows after. You pass through a wide open square brimming with people and slip into a dark alley between two buildings made of carved marble so white it almost hurts the eyes.
Zoro is quiet as he walks behind you, until he isn’t.
“So, what’s the story?”
“Oh… just something from a past life of mine,” you answer offhandedly, fluttering your fingers through the air.
“Yeah? And how many of those have you got?”
You shoot him a piercing look and a crooked grin, “Some number between one and nine — take your best guess.”
Zoro falls silent again as a pair of drunken sailor careen by, arm in arm, belting a sea shanty.
After a while, you turn, “Hey, how’dyou know there was even story to begin with?”
Zoro ticks up an eyebrow, his hands resting one on top of the other over his newly obtained sword hilts as the pair of you wander through the tributary streets, ducking under awnings and slipping through crowds.
“With you, there’s always a story.”
He feels your eyes on him first, and he lets you watch him for a while, his own eyes slipping from store fronts to shop windows. Occasionally, he lets himself linger on the reflection of you and him — him made of so many solid, hard shapes, and you, soft as water, quick as light, elusive as any shadow.
“Then… how do you think this one ends?” you ask, your eyes meeting his in a reflection of a window across which you can see the a vague Nami-shaped pile of expensive clothes.
“This one?”
“Yeah. Ours.”
Zoro grunts, letting his gaze flick away, “What makes you think it’ll end anytime soon?”
He catches your smile and you let him, “Who said anything about soon?”
He feels the prickle of heat as it crawls up his neck and clears his throat.
“Well then, maybe when I become the World’s Greatest Swordsman.”
You frown, suddenly contemplative.
“So… it’ll end when you beat Mihawk?”
Zoro shrugs, “Might. Or it might not.”
Your frown deepens as you turn to face him proper. Through the glass, Nami catches sight of you and is waving you in, pointing at a rack of clothes glittering in sequins and patched in colors you’ve never imagined putting on your body before today.
“No? Won’t that be when you become the greatest in the world? When you beat him?”
Zoro turns, and there — just there, caught in the light of his eyes, the spark of something as he looks down at you. There’s a smile pressed between his lips that’s part mischief, part hesitancy, and all earnest truth.
“World’s a big place. Might have to check around to make sure there’s not a better swordsman out there, somewhere.” His voice is low, hope twisting beneath its rippling surface.
You feel your heart skittering your chest, the warmth in your stomach crystalizing into something more than simple curiosity and harder than desire.
“Ah… right. That does pose a problem, doesn’t it?”
Zoro makes a consenting noise.
“So,” he says, with a tone of light finality as he turns back toward the window behind which Nami is now twirling in front of a mirror in a truly lurid dress of hot pink.
“So…” you say, feigning an air of defeat as you sigh, “I guess you’re stuck with me for a while yet, pretty boy.”
“Hn.” Zoro, for his part, doesn’t sound too upset with the proclamation.
Just then, Luffy’s voice shouts from behind you both and you turn to find him waving.
“Zoro! You have to come look! There’s a guy at the market selling Sea King Meat!”
Then, Nami finally pokes her head out from inside the clothing store, now sporting a pair of blindingly bright disco pants.
“C’mon! There’s like a million dresses I put aside for you to try!”
You and Zoro turn back to each other in a single, stolen breath. Your eyes collide, and Zoro smiles. A small, brilliant, unguarded thing.
“Go on, kitten. I’ll catch up to you.”
You toss him a wide, lingering grin.
“Right. You’d better.”
Zoro waves as he turns towards Luffy, “Don’t worry. I will.”
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chishiyasan · 3 days
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i need him biblically, i need him in ways that are concerning to feminism
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chishiyasan · 3 days
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chishiyasan · 3 days
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this gold can stay
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Kokonoi Hajime X Reader / one-shot, fluff
HAJIME thinks it’s cute the way you’re rummaging through your bag, face scrunched in concentration as you dig into its every nook and cranny, dead-set on finding those tiny movie coupons that you’ve won from the raffle at the local grocery last week. Thanks to your incredible luck, you got yourselves two free seats at the premiere of this one movie you’ve been looking forward to for months, though it might be thanks to that as well that you are both now standing just outside the movie house searching for the tickets that you possibly may have already lost. You sigh, and Hajime thinks it’s been fun seeing your cute little pout but he actually doesn’t like seeing you distressed. He’s about to open his mouth to finally offer to do what you both knew he could’ve always done from the very beginning—and no, not buy the entire cinema (though he’s also perfectly capable of doing that, but which he won’t do as respect to your request of No unnecessary grand spending of money on me, please)—but to offer to pay for the tickets himself instead, when you speak up in defeat:
“They even come with free drinks and popcorns, and you know those tumblers with the steel straws shaped like a cross-hilted sword that they sell at the entrance?” You shake your head. “Gosh, it’s too bad.”
Hajime laughs, his chest feeling light. He takes your face in his hands to soften the crease on your forehead with a quick kiss. You smile when he pinches your cheek.
“Well, we can always just buy our own tickets then, no problem.” He shrugs because it never really was; he’d buy you an entire mall if you do so much as ask, though he knows you won’t because it’d be too impractical. “I’ll even get you your tiny swords and your little movie cups, nerd. So don’t worry about it.”
You roll your eyes at his teasing tone before finally giving in. “I know, I know,” you sigh, smiling softly. “It’s just…Oh, it would’ve been fun.” And Hajime understands; it’s never a problem with the money. It’s the whole…experience of it. It’s this entire concept of unlikely winning some lottery and going out on a Saturday to enjoy the fruits of your non-effort, like you’ve somehow cheated the world out of something, kind of like when you put in random treats in the grocery cart which your mother doesn’t take away, or at least they seem like similar emotional experiences in his head. Hajime has trouble recalling mothers, really, but he does remember your unadulterated joy upon hearing about your spontaneous win last week. It’s similar to the face you make whenever you see the Get 1 more free! at the end of your popsicle stick; it’s close to the sincere look in your eyes when he brings you a cup of coffee at 2AM on the rare times that you have to work overnight; giving him that warm, grateful expression that he knows no money can buy.
He’d purchase the moon and the stars if he could if it means seeing that smile on your face for one more day, even though you might scold him a bit for overspending, sure, but he won’t mind; he could always kiss that little pout away.
He pulls you out of the corner leading you both to the ticket cashier. You tug at his hand, however, when you notice the direction you’re going, eyebrow raised at the sneaky expression on Hajime’s face. “We’re lining up,” you scold, grinning at his dejected sigh. Once you reach the end of the line he pulls you close; hands locked around your waist and your back pressed against his chest, bending down to rest his chin on your shoulder.
Minutes pass and you feel him rubbing his cheek on the fabric of the collar of your coat, his face buried on the space between your neck and under your hair. A habit, a comfort; the feel of cashmere against his skin mixed with your scent along with the warmth of your neck almost lulling him to sleep. It’s his favorite coat of yours, though he’s never told you this before; it’s the one (and only) coat you’d let him buy—because you swore you got enough and you didn’t need that many coats and not with those price tags—when you spotted him absent-mindedly rubbing the fabric of the sleeve against his cheek; his face faraway, almost lost in the softness.
You let your hand wonder to rub at the base of his neck like how you would a cat and he hums, feeling content. A brief respite from the usual storms in his life—you against his chest, his arms secured around you; breathing in all he can of you in the middle of a crowd, in the quiet of the back of the car, in hectic, supermarket lines—
And then he blinks. It’s the same coat you wore at the grocery last week.
“This is the same coat you wore at the grocery last week,” he says out loud, so sudden it startles you, as he turns you around and then holds you by the shoulders half an arm’s span away so he can look you up and down. You blink back in surprise before raising an eyebrow.
“Uh, yeah…” you search your boyfriend’s face. “I love this coat.”
He pokes one hand into a front pocket and then his other hand into the other, searches for a bit, before he takes both hands out to pat, pat, pat softly on the sides of your hips, making you chuckle, before circling his arms around you so he can search your back pockets—and, there; from the left, he takes out your two crumpled movie passes, holds them up with his thumb and index finger with a triumphant look on his face.
“You said you’d put them somewhere unlikely so they don’t get mixed in with the others, remember?”
You laugh an exhausted laugh full of amusement that transitions into one of embarrassment, making you bury your face inside his coat. He hears your muffled ’Stupiiiiid’ into his chest and he can’t help the teasing tone in his words as he cups your head.
“Next time, I’ll hold on to your ticket coupon things, yeah?”
You narrow your eyes, grinning at the idea of Koko having freebies in his pockets. You look up at him with a twinkle in your eyes.
“It helps to be an outfit-repeater, Haji,” to which he only shakes his head, pulling you close once again, his quiet laughter rumbling through his chest.
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@sanzu-sanzu-sanzu 🕷
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chishiyasan · 3 days
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toji stink man
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chishiyasan · 4 days
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Miss Congeniality (2000) dir. Donald Petrie
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chishiyasan · 4 days
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i’m not going to start calling tiktokkers “creators” like what are they creating? new insecurities for women? the worst takes you’ve ever heard in your life?
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chishiyasan · 4 days
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what mouse walks on two legs
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chishiyasan · 4 days
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he’s pleading me to buy him; look at dat face
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