lacyblades
lacyblades
angel
109 posts
cocaine in my lipgloss so when he kisses me he thinks im god
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lacyblades · 9 days ago
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i llove ur fratjo.. I fear not a lot of people write about him and I also enjoy that u made him more complex than just the average frat guy cliche,,,basically I'm trying to say I love him.. Love ur fratjo
thank u !! i luv fratjo SM and there's simply never enough content for him sigh but i am willing to make amends for that heh. and YES i didn't wanna make him surface level he has lots of lore and ilyt
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lacyblades · 9 days ago
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HIII, HRUU? it’s just a silly question but when are you dropping the frat!gojo angst?😭
not a silly question at all !! hii im good baby how are u 🫶 also im really not sure hmm i think soon-ish but i want to explore their dynamic a little more but do not fear i will deliver
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lacyblades · 9 days ago
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Fellow desi 🙏hi
I'm horrible at introducing myself goodbye
ALSO, UR FRATBOY!GOJO IS CHEF'S KISS 🤌🤌
HI TY we luv emotionally shaken men in this house 🫶
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lacyblades · 9 days ago
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where have u been we miss u 😣
imy guys too surprise im back 😛
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lacyblades · 9 days ago
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so... hey
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lacyblades · 27 days ago
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i really hope im not being intrusive (creative-wise) BUT i read that ask abt fratboy gojo angst and honestly if i was cherry i’d already be crashing out bc why would he keep her waiting like that 😭😭😭 like it would mess w my head thinking he doesn’t really want me or something. like lowkey waiting for cherry to crash out on fratboy gojo for being emotionally constipated. like !!!!
not intrusive at all !! i luv when people indulge in frat gojo n cherry !!
i think she's on the brink of an insane crash out we'll see how long she lasts.. he'd def be the one to push it over the edge tho, i don't want to give away everything but angst wise i think he'd panic over being in luv and have some one night stand w a random chick?
and then try and be nonchalant ab it like "we aren't exclusive" 😭😭
or maybe he tells his friends she's a virgin in front of her? i'm still working out the climax but OUGH it's gonna hit
luv fratjo but that ho needs to get ! it ! tg !!
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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If no one’s taken the spot yet…
Can I be 🪁 anon
🙏🙏🙏
its all urs welcome to the slut house 🪁 nonnie 🫶
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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old man sukuna that can barely work his phone but finds it in him to send you every twitter porn video he likes for you two to try later because that's how he shows his love
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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do you intend to write angst for fratboy!gojo?
i do ! and lemme just tell u the angst will be angsting ����‍💨🫶
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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౨ৎ number neighbor!satoru who's phone pinged one night.
hii number neighbor wna see my tits – the drunk text swam blearily in satoru's memory. he'd been hammered that night, just as you, but that message had cut through the haze. what the hell had he sent back?
oh, right. what any horny twenty-something loser would: a not-so-unsolicited dick pic. that's the ridiculously messy way your love story actually kicks off.
it snowballed from there. dumb, suggestive texts morphed into something more intense. "was thinking of u td" bled into "i need u so bad baby." he'd send you a shaky video of himself stroking to a nude you'd sent earlier, and you'd fire back a clip of yourself getting off to him getting off. a digital feedback loop of pure lust.
he's practically vibrating with need these days, phone permanently glued to his hand, high on every little thing you give him. satoru wasn't exactly a social butterfly before, but now?
forget it. his friends probably think he's fallen off the face of the earth. it's gotta be unhealthy, the sheer number of times he's jerked himself raw for you, right?
and yet, he couldn't care less. he'll happily lose hours tangled in his sheets, fisting his hard, veiny cock, chasing another desperate orgasm in the dark. the glow of his phone screen reflects in his slipping glasses.
trying to text and touch himself at the same time is his personal brand of hell, but you keep the messages coming anyway, guiding him with your words because you know he's reading every single one.
even though you can't really control what he does, satoru doesn't cum until you tell him to. on the really good days, you'll send a video of yourself completely undone. fingers slick and deep inside, rubbing that swollen little clit in circles, your moans and whimpers a soundtrack in the background.
the cherry on top is when you finally climax, that wet squirt hitting your phone camera. you send it with a casual hope ur happy now im gonna have to clean off my phone :/
his reply is instant: "yk if i were there i cld clean it up"
then, a beat later: "...with my mouth"
and again, just to be crystal clear: "if that wasnt a given"
it would be almost pathetic, how bad he is at flirting, if you didn't find satoru kind of endearing in his desperation. he's just relieved it never kills the mood.
your number neighbor has no idea what you look like, but if your pussy is that pretty, your face has to be something else entirely.
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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toji smells like marlboro reds + your sugar-sweet perfume because if he's for some reason away from you he can still close his eyes and breathe in your essence <33
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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what if i tell you that ceo!gojo x bimbo!reader are in the works rn- HIII ANGEL POOKIE HOW ARE YOUU??
the ceojo bimboreader agenda is being spread YES
im doing v good powering thru exams ! did great on the ones ive alr took so yayy <33 but how is my bae starr doing xx
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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GIRLS JUST WANNA HAVE FUN ZAZA ! ꒰ঌ ໒꒱
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mission brief your college banned weed, your grades are hanging by a thread, and you definitely did not plan on making your plug your most consistent situationship. w.c 9.8k
risk assessment lots of weed usage and references (this is not based off of #experience for the most part, please be safe & check your sources xx), crack & fluff, female reader, university au, meet-ugly, somewhat ooc characters, misogyny, poor queer assumptions, breaking the 4th wall, city-girl reader, opposites attract, depictions of social anxiety, legally blonde and 2010's anime references, uraume cameo ft! naoya, geto, nanami, choso, toji, sukuna, gojo
a/n the whole concept of a plug romance was ib by my baby @lacyblades's plug gojo series, make sure to check it outt ヾ( ˃ᴗ˂ )◞ • *✰
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☆ NAOYA ZENIN
You weren’t expecting much when you decided to message a guy called Naoya Zenin for a dime bag — just some weed, maybe a weird vibe, and a quick escape. But you should’ve known something was off when everyone who smoked weed gave you that same look.
That solemn, pitying, godspeed-soldier look.
One girl even muttered “I'll pray for you” under her breath, which was a bit dramatic. You were getting dope, not going to war. But then again, they all said the same thing: Naoya’s shit is gas, but he’s the worst fucking person you’ll ever meet. You figured they were exaggerating. You’ve dealt with weirdos before. How bad could he be?
Well.
You found out the moment he opened the door with his stupid bleached-blonde hair, gold chain, and a shirt that had “NO SIMPING ZONE” printed on it like a threat. The hallway already reeked of superiority complex and a mango vape pod. “Who's it for?” he asked, not even a hello. 
You blinked. “What?”
“The weed,” he said, waving the baggie like it was a cursed object. “Your boyfriend? Roomie?”
“Uh. Me?” you said slowly. “It’s… for me?”
And it was like you had kicked his ego right in the crotch.
“You smoke?”
“Yeah.”
“Do you smoke weed?”
“…yes.”
“Like, by yourself?”
“What the fuck is this, a survey?”
He squinted at you like you just told him women had human rights. His face pinched, his lip curled, and you could practically hear the internal misogyny revving like a chainsaw. “Look,” he said, setting the baggie down like it was contaminated, “I'm just saying, it’s kinda unattractive. Like, girls who do drugs? Yikes.” 
You stared. “You sell drugs.”
“Yeah, to guys,” he said, like that was the natural order of things. “Or like, chill chicks. Not…” he gestured vaguely at you.
“Not what?”
“Not, you know. Girls.”
It took everything in you to not put him through a wall. You had come into this with the utmost neutrality. A plug is a person, you told yourself. We don’t judge. But here he was, looking like if insecurity were personified by an anime villain with frat boy vibes, actually trying to cancel the deal because you dared to have a uterus and smoke up. “I don't think I'm comfortable selling to you,” he said, arms crossed like he was laying down some moral high ground. “It's just not feminine.”
“Oh no,” you deadpanned. “What if I stop being feminine and grow chest hair. Will my boobs fall off too?” 
Naoya did not laugh. He looked offended on behalf of the concept of gender. 
You stood there for a moment, blinking slowly at this man who would probably cry if a woman outsmoked him, wondering if it was too late to just start growing your own goddamn weed. Or if the hallway cameras would catch you if you kicked him in the shin and ran. 
“I'm not selling to you,” he said again, arms folded. 
“Cool,” you said, turning around. “Then I'm telling every girl on campus to never buy from you again.” 
His eyes bugged. “Wait, what—”
You didn’t wait. Naoya Zenin could keep his opinions and his za. You’d rather go sober than fund his self-inflicted sexism. Besides, rumor had it a guy took gacha bribes, and he didn’t mind if your pronouns were she/her/hitting-that-shit.
The house party was loud in that way only bad parties are — bass thumping through your knees, a fog machine making the entire room smell like burnt plastic, and some poor girl crying in the bathroom over a man who probably owned Yeezys. You weren’t even sure why you came. Boredom, maybe. You hadn’t seen anyone you liked in the first ten minutes, and you were seconds from leaving when the crowd split like the red sea and in walked… him.
Naoya Zenin. But not the "no simping zone" shirt Naoya. This was party Naoya. His hair was slicked back, jaw sharp under dim strobe lights, silver chain glinting under a jacket that suspiciously looked like real leather. He smelled like something expensive and infuriating — like pepper and pine and generational wealth. If you didn’t know better, you might’ve said he looked good. If you really didn’t know better, you might’ve said he looked hot. 
But you did know better, so you stood very still and hoped he didn’t see you. Spoiler: he did. He made a beeline straight to you, sauntering like he owned the party, the house, and every sad soul on the aux. “Hey,” he said, voice practically smirking. 
You raised an eyebrow. “Don’t tell me I'm suddenly woman enough to sell weed to.” He chuckled like you were being so dramatic. “Nah, not for sale.” He pulled a sleek, perfectly rolled doobie from behind his ear.
“This batch is just for testing.”
Testing.
You glanced down at it. It was beautiful. Thick, crisp, neat. Probably rolled with tweezers in a windless room while a choir sang in the background. The DJ switched tracks to something that sounded like a washing machine being sacrificed. You felt your brain scream a little. “Testing?” you echoed.
“Yeah,” he said, stepping closer. You could smell his cologne now — rich boy cinnamon and something spicy enough to hurt your feelings. “Gotta know if it’s worth selling to, you know, guys. Not girls.” He smirked like he was being cute. You wanted to set him on fire.
And yet.
The blunt in his fingers was practically glistening. You were two shots of pineapple vodka in, and the DJ just played the third remix of “Mr. Brightside.” 
Fuck it. You took it from him, muttering a bored “light it.” 
Two hits in and you knew you were screwed. It was good. Like, ruin your night and make you vulnerable to a Zenin good.
And he was watching you far too closely. Like a cat watching a mouse. Or a man who knew he had something you wanted, and was way too smug about it. “So?” he asked, leaning in. His voice was smug, sweetened with that particular brand of you should be lucky i’m even offering you this. “Good enough for the boys?”
You exhaled slowly. You could lie and say it sucked, but your lungs were singing and your brain was on vacation. You knew it. He knew it.
You didn’t answer.
He leaned back, arms crossed, pleased like a cat who caught a bird with one paw. “I knew it,” he said, low. “I saved this batch for you, y’know.” 
You blinked. “You what?”
“Yeah. Thought you’d show up.” he shrugged, too casual, too cocky. “Guess it’s your lucky night.”
You blinked again. Once. Twice. The music in the background dropped and the beat switched again. Someone screamed “this is my song!” when it absolutely wasn’t. You were high, annoyed, and mildly impressed. 
“You’re insufferable,” you muttered, passing the blunt back. He grinned. “But I'm hot.”
…Unfortunately, he was. Even more unfortunate — he knew it. And worst of all? You were definitely getting high off his stash again.
What happened over the next few months could only be described as a slow descent into the most bizarre relationship dynamic you’ve ever had with a dealer. And not relationship like that — God no. Naoya Zenin was still the same infuriating, misogyny-scented man you had ever met. He still made comments like “Women shouldn’t be smoking blunts this fat” and “You’ll ruin your lungs, babe, you should stick to edibles like the other girls.” But you? You were different. Or at least that’s what he decided in whatever part of his ego that functioned as a moral compass.
You were his little test subject. His “control group.” 
“I just need someone dumb enough to be honest,” he’d say, handing you a fresh joint before anyone else got their hands on the batch. 
And somehow, that translated to: you always got the first roll. You always got the stronger shit. You always got the nice papers, the flavored ones, the ones with little sparkles or kittens on them.
Hello Kitty rolling papers. You held up the pack once, squinting at it. “You bought this ironically?” He didn’t even look at you, just shrugged from his desk, hoodie pulled over his hair like he wasn’t in his own damn dorm room. “Females like you go feral over that stuff,” he muttered. Then, quieter: 
“I saw it in your story once. The pink ones. Said they were cute.”
You blinked. “You saw my story?”
“No.”
You nodded, lips twitching. “Right.” 
He kept pretending to scroll on his phone, even though you saw the screen was just his locked home page. Meanwhile, you were curled up in the middle of his very expensive mattress — firm, clean, annoyingly good quality — exhaling smoke toward the ceiling while some painfully curated “chill” playlist stumbled through a loop of Kendrick, Yeat, and occasional anime lofi covers that you knew weren’t there when you first met him. “Did you just shuffle a Youtube lo-fi mix into this?” you asked once, high and curious.
“No. It's just…Japanese trap.”
“It's literally the Yarichin Bitch Club—”
“Shut up.”
He never sat on the bed. Always lurked in the corner, leaned on his stupid ergonomic chair like he didn’t wanna be caught enjoying your company. And every time you asked him why he was standing like an NPC, he grumbled some shit about “Not getting comfortable around girls.” But you never caught the subtext.
Naoya Zenin, feminist icon? Absolutely not. Naoya Zenin, a man whose internalized sexism was now actively fighting his deeply repressed crush on you? Every single day.
“I'm not doing this because I like you,” he reminded you once, voice clipped, as he passed you a custom pre-roll sealed in a Hello Kitty ziplock. 
You didn’t even look up from your phone. “Who said you did?”
He opened his mouth. Shut it. 
"You females are so confusing,” he muttered.
You snorted. “Good thing I’m just your lab rat then.”
His jaw clicked. You didn’t notice — because, as always, you had no idea. But Naoya? Naoya was drowning in the best strain of delusion you’d ever smoked.
☆ GETO SUGURU
The first thing you noticed when you met Geto was his hair.
Thick, dark, and pulled into a glossy, mid-back bun that would put half your Pinterest saves to shame. It shimmered under the light, almost too good to be real — like someone had digitally rendered it for an ad campaign about hair-care. 
You’d walked into his place half-prepared to meet a woman. 
Blame the name. Suguru sounded soft to your tired brain, and when your friend said “bro’s got that gas, you’ll know by the hair,” you assumed a goddess of a plug — tall, mysterious, beautiful — would be waiting to bless you with carefully grown hydro and no small amount of mommy energy.
So when you entered, saw the figure from behind — tall, yes. Beautiful, obviously. Long hair, swinging as he reached for something on the table — you went, “Oh my god, your hair is gorgeous, girl.”
And then he turned around.
Oh.
Purple eyes. A sharp jawline that made your heart do unspeakable things. Black tunnel plugs in his ears — big ones, glossy, catching the light just right. He blinked, paused, and then smiled slowly. Warmly. 
“Thank you,” he said, voice low and silken and not at all belonging to the she/her you’d crafted in your head. “But I'm not a girl.”
You wanted to die, like right there. Crawl under the nearest coffee table and remain a fossil. 
“Oh my god, I’m so sorry,” you blurted, heat rushing to your ears. “I didn’t — I mean — your hair — I wasn’t trying to be weird, I just thought —” He laughed, full and rich, head tipping back as he tucked a strand of hair behind his ear. “Nah, you’re good,” he said. “That's a new one, though.”
You were not good. You were actively malfunctioning, trying to recalibrate from cool girl buying weed to accidental misgenderer who couldn’t shut up.
“I mean, like, plugs — you’ve got plugs and you’re the plug? Kinda poetic,” you tried, grasping for levity, for a joke, anything to move past your humiliation. 
That got another laugh. You could’ve sworn the floor dipped under you. 
“Yeah?” he mused. “Maybe I'm just really committed to the brand.” You nodded too fast, clearing your throat as you pulled out your phone like it would protect you. 
He handed you the bag — neatly sealed, vacuum-tight, labeled with a tiny sticker that said “pink runtz” in his neat handwriting. Everything about it was extremely polite. Even the way he held it out to you, like you were at a boutique counter and he was passing over perfume samples. “Here you go,” he said. “Enjoy.” 
You took it with both hands. (Why both hands? What were you, receiving a family heirloom??) “Thank you,” you mumbled. “And again, uh… sorry for the whole…” you gestured vaguely to his entire existence.
“No problem,” he said easily. “See you later, girl.”
You blinked. Did a little double-take.
…Girl? 
Wait. Was he gay?
He had to be, right? The energy was just too smooth, too non-threatening, too effortless. Plus, the hair, the plugs, the smile, the way he said girl — it all fit. Yeah. Definitely gay. Sweet, gorgeous, gay plug.
…Right?
Meanwhile, Geto watched you leave, eyes still soft at the corners, thumb brushing idly across his palm where your fingers had almost grazed his. “Cute,” he murmured to himself. Then added, under his breath, “Wish she’d called me babe instead.”
But there’s always next time.
But the next time you dropped by Geto’s, you didn’t come alone. You brought Uraume.
They were tall, pale in that “Victorian ghost but hot” way, and wore a structured, monochrome fit that made you feel underdressed even though you were just here for a refill. Uraume moved like they were born inside an art gallery — all grace and precision and a deep-rooted meh to the chaos of the world. You’d known them since undergrad and always thought they and Geto would hit it off. Same aura, same cool, collected, possibly-haunt-their-own-loft-in-Berlin energy. 
“You’ll love him,” you said on the walk over. “Gorgeous, chill, and he called me girl unironically.” 
Uraume gave you a side-eye that could shear bone. “You’re trying to set me up with your plug?”
“Not set up — just, like, meet. He's gay. I think. You’ll see.”
Uraume didn’t respond, but their silence was pointed.
Geto was expecting you. Well — you and “someone else,” though the someone was vague enough that he’d let himself entertain the delusion that it might be a cousin. a roommate. A dog. 
But then the door opened, and there you were. Smiling wide, eyes bright, excitement making your voice bubble up like soda. “Hey!” you chirped. “Brought a friend!” Behind you, Uraume stepped in, immediately scanning the apartment with an expression that could only be described as polite suspicion. 
Geto stood, blinking once. He recognized beauty when he saw it — Uraume was undeniably attractive, angular in a sharp, clean way that made his chest instinctively straighten. But that was about it. No spark, no interest, no gravity. His attention flicked back to you, as it always did. You were laughing at something stupid. You always laughed at something stupid. God, it was going to kill him. 
Small talk ensued. You made introductions, Uraume kept their hands folded like they were here for a health inspection. Finally, they turned to you with a very pointed question.
“…Where’s the gay?”
Geto froze mid-baggie. You looked confused.
“What?”
“The plug,” Uraume clarified, gesturing vaguely to Geto. “You said he was gay.”
You blinked. Turned to Geto. He blinked. Then said, very calmly, very apologetically:
“I'm not.”
Silence. 
Like full, sitcom-record-scratch silence. 
Uraume’s brow twitched. Geto cleared his throat. 
You… looked like someone had just pulled the rug out from under your brain.
“But — the ‘see you later, girl’ — the hair — the —”
Geto held up a hand, trying not to laugh. “Okay, first of all, I say that to people. Second of all…”
He paused, looking at you. And for one millisecond, the air changed.
“…I don’t really talk like that to anyone else.”
You stared. Uraume stared. Geto stared right at you.
Oh.
You wanted to rewind the whole interaction. Crawl backward out the door. Instead, you made a high-pitched noise that sounded like a mouse being stepped on. Uraume, bless their elegant heart, sighed deeply. “So you weren’t trying to set me up?”
“I mean… i was,” you said weakly. “But—”
“With a man who’s been undressing you with his eyes since we walked in.”
You almost choked. Geto made a sound that could’ve been a cough, a laugh, or help.
“I — I haven’t —”
“You have,” Uraume replied, adjusting their collar with zero chill. “It's fine. I get it. I'm attractive, but unfortunately I have no tits. Tragic, really.” Geto finally let out a small, helpless laugh. “You’re very attractive,” he said. “Just not really my type.”
“Yeah,” Uraume said, smirking a little now. “Your type’s clearly flustered and wearing mismatched socks.” 
You looked down. Kill me. 
Uraume turned toward the door. “I'll wait outside before I see something traumatic. Thanks for the entertainment.” And just like that, they ghosted out, as elegantly as they’d entered. Leaving you and Geto alone. You opened your mouth to apologize. Or clarify. Or die. But Geto just smiled. Soft. A little amused, a little not.
“…For the record,” he said, walking over to hand you the refill — perfectly packed, like always — “I liked the idea of a refill. Not the setup.” 
Your fingers brushed. 
“But,” he added, leaning just a little closer, “If you ever wanna set yourself up instead…”
You blinked. He winked. You may never recover.
☆ NANAMI KENTO
You’d been waiting under the ugly stone archway behind the Humanities building for nearly twenty minutes, pacing and checking your phone like a teenager abandoned after a school dance. Your guy — well, your friend’s guy who swore the plug was “chill, reliable, and hot if you’re into geeks” — was supposed to meet you here. Codeword: blue eyes hypnotize.
Very subtle. Very anonymous. Very fucking annoying.
So when a man in a tailored suit walked up the steps with a suitcase, you automatically moved out of his way. He didn’t look like someone who was here to facilitate illicit extracurriculars. He looked like a tax auditor. A hitman. The guy who gently but firmly fires you with a severance packet. “Excuse me,” he said, voice precise and polite. “Are you here for the… meetup?” 
You blinked. “The what?” 
He glanced at your shoes, then at your phone, then back at you like he was mentally cross-referencing a checklist. 
“…Blue eyes hypnotize?” he said, like it physically pained him. 
“Oh my god.” you took an instinctive step back. “You’re the plug?”
He sighed, like he’d been asked to commit a crime against his will. “No. I’m not the —” he paused, clearly wrestling with something deep and moral. “I'm… covering for someone.” You stared. He didn’t elaborate. He was wearing an ID card around his neck that read Nanami Kento, Head Delegate – UN Model Council. 
So he’d just come back from MUN. You felt like you’d stumbled into a BBC drama where the intern accidentally does espionage. 
“Are you sure you’re in the right place?” you asked. “Because I was told blue eyes —”
“Couldn’t make it today,” Nanami cut in. “He said — and allow me to quote — ‘Lol can u pass it to the hot girl, she’ll know, just say the code thing xoxo.’”
You winced. “That tracks.” 
He nodded, grim. “I debated ignoring both of you.”
Then, without further preamble, he knelt down, set his suitcase on the grimy pavement, popped it open like he was about to give a TED talk — and began removing documents. Notebooks. Binders. Printed policy drafts. A laminated flowchart titled Conflict Resolution and Drug Decriminalization in East Asia. You stared in silence as he pulled out a sealed envelope marked “last will & testament” and tucked it under his arm like it was a receipt.
Finally, from somewhere beneath the bureaucratic detritus, he extracted a moderately crumpled ziplock bag. It looked wildly out of place in the otherwise pristine, corporate-ass briefcase. He carefully dusted it off with a cloth (a cloth) before handing it to you like he was passing off a court summons. A homemade QR code was slapped on the back, printed on sticker paper. “You can scan here,” he said. “Please include the transaction ID in the note.” 
You took it slowly. Reverently. 
“…Thanks?”
“Don’t thank me,” he said flatly. “I had a debate round scheduled for now. Instead I'm standing here, holding someone else’s will, handing you illicit substances in front of a garbage bin.”
“You… seem very responsible for someone who knows a guy like blue eyes.”
He scoffed. “I wouldn't say I know him. We’re roommates, unfortunately. He once tried to convince our landlord that the leak in our ceiling was a portal to the astral plane. She gave us a three-day notice.”
“And you’re covering for him?”
He looked like he wanted to die. 
“He told me you looked ‘docile and non-threatening.’ I assumed that meant you wouldn’t stab me.”
“Docile?” you echoed. “What, did he send a photo?” 
He didn’t answer, which was, in itself, an answer. 
A long pause. Both of you just kind of standing there. Neither one of you exactly thrilled about the situation. Finally, you shifted. 
“Well. I guess this is… it.”
“Mm.”
“You gonna do this again?”
“Absolutely not.”
You nodded. Respectable. As you turned to leave, Nanami called out:
“He'll be back next time. I sincerely hope.” 
You raised a hand. “Thanks again… delegate Nanami.”
He exhaled like it physically hurt to hear that out loud. Behind you, his voice trailed faintly into the air:
“…I really need new roommates.”
But really, you weren’t expecting him again. Not the man in the wrinkled button-down and loosened tie, sleeves shoved up like he’d been mid-negotiation or a breakdown — same difference — and somehow still smelling like freshly baked cookies and weed. It took you a second to register. The flour-dusted briefcase. The weary expression. The gold name badge peeking out of his chest pocket like it had been forgotten there weeks ago. “Delegate Nanami?” you said, bewildered.
He flinched like you’d thrown a dart into his spine. “Not… officially,” he muttered, voice hoarse, eyes scanning the small courtyard like he was checking for witnesses. “This is strictly a freelance appearance.”
You blinked, then looked down. In his hands: a small, clear plastic box tied with a ridiculous pink ribbon. Inside it, two types of cookies — one set perfectly shaped and golden, the other darker, denser, with a suspiciously herbal aroma even through the box. Your brows lifted. “You baked these?”
“Unfortunately,” he said. “A last-minute request.”
You took them gently, inspecting the sticker on the side — a wonky heart with love n’ nip, xoxo scrawled in a handwriting you’d never seen before. You turned the box over and saw the same homemade QR sticker from last time, this one stuck crookedly, like it had been applied mid-crisis. 
“These from… ‘blue eyes hypnotize’?” you asked, voice skeptical. 
Nanami closed his eyes like you’d recited a slur. “Yes. He thought it would be a good ‘seasonal campaign.’ He said it was ‘low effort, high whimsy.’ Then he went to get his hair frosted and asked me to ‘deliver the goods with love and mystery.’” 
You blinked again. “I thought you were just filling in last time?” 
Nanami opened his eyes. They were bloodshot in the way that suggested not smoking but being around too much smoke.
“…I got roped into baking. He said people were more likely to buy it if it was homemade and ethically sourced.”
You stifled a laugh, then paused. Then looked at the box again. “…Wait, these are two different batches?” He tensed. Subtly, barely perceptible. But you caught it. 
“Yes,” he said slowly. “One is… catnip. The other’s regular.”
You tilted your head. “Why?”
“In case…” he cleared his throat. “You didn’t want the first kind. Or wanted both. Variety is important.” 
You stared. “Did you bake two types for everyone?”
He didn’t answer, which was an answer. 
Your lips parted just slightly, breath caught between amusement and something warmer. You noticed the way he wouldn’t quite meet your eyes, how he kept smoothing his hand over the lid of the briefcase, the tension in his shoulders rigid like he was balancing a full tray on his back. He hadn’t shaved. There was flour in his hair, and one of his shirt buttons was mismatched. 
“You look like you’ve been through hell,” you said softly. He gave a one-shouldered shrug, the corner of his mouth twitching. “I've had worse Thursdays.”
You held the box up between you. “These are really cute. And they smell amazing.” 
Nanami looked like he was torn between relief and abject embarrassment. “Thank you,” he said stiffly. “It was mostly Gojo’s idea.”
“Who?”
He blinked. “Blue eyes.”
Oh. You stared a second longer. 
“So… he has a name?”
Nanami didn’t even flinch this time. “Unfortunately.”
You smiled, crooked and fond. “Well,” you said, “You’re a much better cupid.”
He looked at you like you’d cursed him. Then immediately broke eye contact to pretend to re-check the payment QR code, even though nothing had changed. You watched the way his fingers fiddled with the sticker again, then stopped, pressing the corner down like it mattered. “…If you ever want non-catnip cookies,” he said, carefully, like testing the edge of a knife, “I have a standing recipe. No obligation. No… ribbons.” 
Your eyes widened slightly. Was that an invitation? Or a bakery recommendation? But he wouldn’t look up. Instead, he gave you a brisk nod, already turning away like he hadn’t just panic-confessed a crush via cookie code. You stood there, cookies in hand, heart full of sugar and smoke, watching him retreat like a man fleeing the scene of a very gentle crime.
It took you a full minute before you laughed to yourself. 
Then you texted your friend.
you [2:39pm]: blue eyes is not the hot one. it’s his roommate. holy shit.
☆ CHOSO KAMO
You were all for supporting local businesses — especially if they bloomed out of someone’s dorm bathroom and gave you a ten-minute high from a single puff.
You’d heard of him before. The plant guy. New transfer. Lowkey, didn’t talk much, wore hoodies with the sleeves chewed through, never made eye contact during attendance. Kamo, someone said. Or maybe that was just the name listed on the label of the ziplock bags he apparently sold. A friend of a friend vouched for him — said he grew it himself, only used filtered water, and played classical music near the pots “because it helps the terpenes flourish.” You didn’t know what that meant, you just knew that when this mutual passed you a single gram with the warning “this shit might make you see your own birth,” you paid attention.
So when the same friend texted you a barely readable address, you expected to meet some scrawny countryside kid with glasses and dirt under his nails. You even rehearsed your polite city-slicker voice. “Thank you, this is so fresh,” and all that. What you didn’t expect was for the door to swing open and reveal a man who looked like he’d just stepped off the cover of some indie underground zine titled ‘men who could ruin your life and forget your name.’
Tall, built like he’d been carved by someone clinically horny, shirt hanging off one shoulder like it had given up, collarbone pierced — pierced, — with a silver barbell that glinted when he moved. He had a black tattoo running sideways down his nose, and those lips. Full, slightly chapped, plush enough to be distracting. Soft brown eyes that barely blinked, droopy and disinterested under a smudge of lavender eyeshadow, like he’d done his makeup in the dark and didn’t care to fix it. He blinked once. 
“Hey.” His voice was low, like a gravel path after rain. 
You opened your mouth and forgot the words. 
He stepped aside to let you in, and you caught a whiff of something — clean laundry, basil, and just the faintest trace of lemon body wash. No way, you thought. No fucking way this is Kamo. 
“You want water or somethin’?” he asked, rubbing the back of his neck, head tilting a little. “I made banana bread this morning. There’s still a slice left, I think.”  You stared. Banana bread? He blinked again, slightly slower this time. “You okay?”
You walked in like you were sleepwalking.
His dorm was not what you imagined a weed grower’s to be, not even close. No Bob Marley posters, no messy ashtrays, no vape clouds. Instead, the place was warm, cozy, with sunlight filtered through gauzy curtains that made everything look soft. His desk was cluttered with seed packets, plant cuttings in glasses of water, a very worn-out book called “Cannabis for dummies” and another called “The botany of desire.” And from the bathroom, you could faintly see green. Actual green, like a jungle was growing in his bathtub. 
“The temp in there’s perfect,” he said casually, catching your line of sight. “Humidity’s the trickiest part. But once I got the cycle right, everything started thriving.” 
And then — as if he hadn’t just committed several crimes with that body and this voice — he leaned over the mini fridge and pulled out a ziplock, weighed it with one hand, and passed it to you. 
“This one’s blueberry kush, real sweet. Might make your ears ring a little.” 
You didn’t know whether to thank him or to cry. He looked at you again, head slightly cocked. “You good?”
You nodded slowly. Because here he was — this beautiful, pierced, sleepy-eyed plant nerd who baked banana bread, listened to ABBA (You swear ‘Gimme Gimme Gimme’ was playing faintly from his bluetooth speaker), and handed you weed like it was homemade granola. None of the rumors did him justice.
He didn’t flirt, didn’t brag, didn’t even seem to know what he looked like. And that made it all ten times worse. Because what were you supposed to do with a plug who looked like temptation and acted like a librarian? You clutched the baggie like it was fragile glass and said the only thing your brain could conjure.
“…This smells amazing.”
He smiled — smiled, like the sun peeking through a lazy sky. “Thanks. I can text you when I got more.” You nodded, then tripped over the doorway on your way out. ABBA played on —
And Choso squeaked.
An actual, involuntary, horrifically real squeak the second you closed his door and your footsteps padded down the hall, fading like the last four minutes of an ABBA song that’d just ruined his life. And he stood there, in his socks — the ones with holes in them — baggie still dangling from one hand, half-eaten banana bread slice in the other, mind replaying everything he’d just said like it was being beamed through his skull with a megaphone labeled you fucking blew it.
This wasn’t how it was supposed to go. He wasn’t supposed to just freeze and panic and act like the most boring man to ever walk the earth. He was supposed to be cool. Show you his homemade record shelf and his boots — his boots, god, the fifteen different pairs of heavy, clunky, beautiful black boots all the way from his hometown. He even dusted them this morning. He wanted to explain how each one had its own story: market day boots, rainy day boots, festival boots. One pair still had a faint smudge of dried mud from a music fair he went to at fifteen. He wanted to offer you tea, tell you about the dried hibiscus he had steeping in a jar in the corner, and how his mum used to say it’d make your cheeks glow. But what had he said instead?
“Do you want banana bread?”
Fucking banana bread, like the most basic thing in the world. In his hometown, every lad could make banana bread blindfolded and drunk. It was the first thing boys learned to make when they had their first real crush. 
And now you probably thought he was just like every other wide-eyed, weed-growing loser in the city, trying to butter up his buyers with carbs and eye contact. 
Choso sank onto his bed, face in his hands. His sheets still smelled like lemongrass detergent, and the faintest whiff of you clung to the air — perfume, shampoo, city.
Because you. You, with your soft voice and effortless smile. You who had saved him from a capitalism-induced crisis four months ago when he was standing in a café, overwhelmed by a chalkboard menu that listed a drink called "dirty chai" that cost more than his weekly groceries. Back home, tea was just tea. Simple, warm, honest. But he had been cold. He had been lost. 
And then — then you’d appeared behind him like some ethereal campus fairy, leaned in and said, “If you like green tea, maybe try the matcha? It’s less confusing than it sounds.”
And then you were gone.
You didn’t even stay to see how red he turned, or how he repeated that order in a near-whisper and clutched the paper cup like a relic. He'd gone home and told his brother that someone helped him, a girl, a kind one. He never caught your name, but your smile — your voice — that stuck. 
Matcha. That was what you gave him. That was what he ordered every time he came to that café, even though he could steep better tea with his eyes closed at home. Just in case he ran into you again. But you never showed up.
Until today.
You — you, the girl who made him believe the city might have good people after all — had walked into his room asking for zaza. His zaza. And you smiled at him like you remembered none of that and everything all at once. So casually. Like you hadn’t tilted his entire axis four months ago and then reappeared, smelling like laundry and looking like a dream. And now you were gone again, and he didn’t even tell you about the purple rice he was growing in his windowsill or the wild strawberries in a shoebox under the sink. 
He flopped backwards on the bed, groaning into the sheets.
“Stupid. Stupid.”
Well. Maybe next time, he’d get it right. He’d make you real tea, show you the boots, maybe play you something on his clunky little record player. He didn’t know much about city girls. But he knew he liked this one. And he’d do better. Just wait.
☆ TOJI FUSHIGURO
You were sent as bait.
Not in so many words, but you knew. You knew from the way they all nudged each other and giggled like hyenas when you agreed to “do the pickup this time.” You knew from the way someone said, “Toji only deals with girls, haha,” and you really knew when another added, “Just act pretty and you’ll be fine.”
Gross, objectively. And also a very bold assumption about your gender identity, frankly, but you were too bored and too curious to turn it down. 
Which is why you were now sitting on a faded public park bench with peeling red paint and disturbing Mickey Mouse graffiti — eyes darting toward every approaching silhouette like prey — waiting for what your friend described as “the guy who looks like he could eat a helicopter.” You later realize that he does not look like he could eat a helicopter. He looks like he already did, and is now looking for dessert.
Toji Fushiguro approaches like a goddamn myth in motion. Tall, built like someone who’s been bench pressing prison inmates, dressed in head-to-toe black like he’d gotten lost on the way to a mob funeral, with scars you didn’t want to imagine the origin of. He had the sort of face that could terrify a priest and seduce a nun. And you? You just sat there, fully convinced you were about to die. But then—
“Are those… purple?” he asked, pointing at your nails. 
His voice was quiet. Too quiet. Not gravelly, not sultry — awkward. Almost bashful. 
You blinked. He blinked back. He sat down, and the bench groaned like it was filing a complaint with god. You watched him fumble with something in his massive hands, and you noticed the way he didn’t look at you — not really. More like next to you. His eyes darted everywhere else. The grass, the paint peeling on the bench, the weird drawing of Mickey Mouse’s warped little face near your thigh. He cleared his throat. 
“Uh, suits you,” he said, nodding vaguely in your direction. “The purple. It's nice.”
Okay. What.
This was the guy who was supposedly a womanizer? This was the plug people were too scared to deal with unless they were certified bombshells? This man who looked like a live-action anime villain and moved like he could break your ribs with a hug was out here complimenting your nails like he was mustering every ounce of courage he had not to combust? He finally handed you the goods — in iridescent, pearlescent, holographic wrapping. Something that looked like it was bought from a dollar store for birthday party favors. 
You blinked again. 
“Uh, sorry about the, uh—” he gestured at the bag vaguely. “Didn’t have tape. So I just, you know. Wrapped it.” 
You held it like it was a gift, because it was. Because Toji had just handed you a space cake wrapped like a birthday present and was now standing up, brushing nonexistent dust from his pants like he’d just had a tea party and wasn’t quite sure what came next. 
“Okay, uh. Thanks for coming. Sorry if that was — um. I mean, enjoy,” he stammered, and then—
He bowed. 
Full, chest-folded, bowed. And then walked away like he’d just embarrassed himself in front of royalty. 
You just sat there, high on confusion. Maybe he really had never seen a woman before. Or maybe — more likely — the stares and the glares and the resting murder face was just a cover. Because the truth was… Toji couldn’t smile without looking like he was trying to stop one from happening. And if he did, it’d probably scare someone anyway. So he’d rather not. But he tried. He tried. He asked about your nails, and you couldn’t help but smile. Maybe you’d volunteer to do the pickups more often. You had a nail appointment next week, after all.
But before all of this, Toji was in a jungle gym. Let’s just get that part out of the way.
He was crouched awkwardly between two plastic slides, head ducked under a bar that was clearly not meant for full-grown adult men, let alone him, all six-foot-something of pure ex-hitman-turned-therapy-fundraiser bulk. His knees were digging into damp, sand-caked rubber flooring, and he was trying — trying — not to hyperventilate while giving himself a pep talk. 
Okay. Okay, okay, okay. Just… be normal. Be casual. Ask how she is. Don’t stare. Don’t say anything about her eyes. Or her hands. Or her voice. Or anything.
Toji squeezed his eyes shut. Fuck. it was happening again. His mind flung itself back into the past — high school, senior year, school corridors lit with the aggressive hum of fluorescent lighting and the nervous tap-tap-tap of his big-ass converse against linoleum floors. He'd had a plan, dammit. A plan. Talk to girls, practice conversations, get better at the social thing, and finally approach Sydney, the sunny blonde in his homeroom with that annoying little sparkle in her eyes that made him feel like a dumbass every time she said hi.
Except.
Except, hormones are a bitch.
What started as “just practice” spiraled very quickly into a bizarre PR nightmare where Toji found himself talking to literally every girl but Sydney. Out of anxiety. Out of panic. Out of a weird, rabid need to rehearse and re-rehearse and never get to the main act.
By graduation, Sydney was dating someone named Nate, and Toji was The Guy Who Hits On Everyone But Doesn’t Know How To Finish A Sentence. 
A womanizer, a creep, someone no guy would leave their sister alone with — not because he did anything wrong, but because he was too awkward to do anything right. 
The social anxiety diagnosis came a year later and the therapy bills came after. Then came the dealing, and then came the reputation. The funny thing? 
He never liked dealing. 
He hated being seen, hated having to look people in the eye, hated the goddamn small talk. He tried to automate it, for god’s sake — had a spreadsheet, QR codes, fucking inventory notes on his phone — anything to avoid actual human connection. And now here he was, hiding in a goddamn jungle gym because you’re too fucking pretty. His pulse thudded in his ears. He was clutching the baggie like it was a ring box, knees shaking. 
You hadn’t even done anything. Hadn’t flirted, hadn’t asked, hadn’t even looked at him too long. Just sat on that bench like you were built from sun and honey and a little bit of whatever God put into women he wanted men to lose their entire minds over.
He tried to regulate his breathing.
Breathe in for four. Hold. Out for eight. Do not throw up. Do not ask her about her zodiac sign. Do not speak unless spoken to.
Toji crouch-shuffled out of the jungle gym like a grown man doing the walk of shame, palms sweaty, jaw clenched. You were still there, reading something on your phone, bag slung lazily over your shoulder, legs crossed just enough to be intimidating without meaning to. Your nails were painted. Purple.
He short-circuited a little. 
“Uh, nice nails,” he blurted, voice gravelled and quiet and too fast. You looked up, startled. He froze. 
Smooth.
His fingers twitched. Maybe he should just hand you the ziploc and run like usual. Say nothing, keep it clean, keep it simple. That's what everyone else got. The runners. The girlfriends. The random brave strangers who’d come up all smiles and try to flirt — not because they liked him, but because they thought it’d get them an extra gram. But you… you asked him how he was. Just once. 
How are you, Toji? 
Like it mattered. Like he mattered.
He cleared his throat and sat beside you like the world might split open and swallow him whole. The bench creaked like it was offended by his weight. 
He hated this. Hated being in his own skin, hated how his resting face looked like he was glaring, when really, he was just trying to think of something polite to say that didn’t involve complimenting your entire genetic lineage.
“Uh, I wrapped it,” he muttered, handing you the baggie with the iridescent paper. “Didn’t have… tape. So. Yeah.” 
You took it like it was a birthday present. Smiled at him. And for a second, the social noise inside his head dimmed.
Toji stood up. His palms were sweaty again.
He bowed. Bowed, like you were royalty. Like that was the only socially acceptable thing he could think of to do. And when he turned and walked away — stiffly, hurriedly, like he was being chased by a ghost — he swore he’d never let anyone send someone else in his place again.
Not when you were the one showing up.
☆ RYOMEN SUKUNA
The sun was a bitch today. You knew that because your thighs were sticking to the plastic bus stop bench, your pits were questioning their loyalty to your deodorant, and your brother had sent you to do his dirty work like this was the goddamn hunger games. 
“Just go, it’s been paid for. Don’t make eye contact. Don’t say thank you.”
Oh sure. Easy. Send your sister out into the world of mysterious substance exchange like you’re not the one who watched her cry over the scrapped ending of Legally Blonde less than two hours ago. 
So here you were. Sweaty, confused, a little delirious from secondhand heatstroke. And then you saw him. Which is to say, him.
Tattoos snaking up both arms and his face — his fucking face — like he had crawled out of a graphic novel and got bored halfway through. Piercings glinting in the sunlight, bleached hair pulled back in a way that was supposed to look effortless but very much screamed intentional. Shirt unbuttoned halfway like it was doing him a favor. That’s not a dealer, you thought. That's a Greek god in cargo pants. But no, that’s exactly who he was. “Yo,” he said, already digging into the backpack slung across one shoulder. 
“Your brother told me indica, but like — he said nighttime indica, not couchlock, which’s basically the same thing, but it depends if he meant something like the pink runtz or more like a platinum OG — wait, do you know if he likes purple terps? ‘Cause I have this one that tastes like fucking grape medicine but in a good way. Or, like, there’s one that hits you with dry mouth fast but it’s good for sleep—”
He kept going. And going, listing things like you were supposed to understand the periodic table of weed strains. You nodded, lips parted slightly in what you thought was a neutral expression but was probably closer to early-onset panic. You could feel your heart pulsing in your neck. Your mouth was dry. Or wet? Both? You couldn’t tell. Everything was damp and hot and stressful. Finally, after what felt like three hours but was probably three minutes, you swallowed and said—
“I don't know.” 
Barely a whisper. Shaky, a little croaky, possibly traumatized. “I don't… I don't know what kind. I wasn't told.”
Sukuna — you didn’t know that was his name yet, but it was giving Sukuna — stopped. His eyes twitched. As a matter of fact, his whole body twitched. He stared at you like he’d just been hit by a midsummer tax audit. 
And then he let out the loudest, most visceral groan of human exhaustion ever recorded. Head tilted back, hands shoved through his hair, a full-body sigh that made birds scatter and God turn the sun up just to be petty.
“Bro, what the fuck.” he muttered, pacing. “I’ve got six more stops, two of them in the fucking dorms — do you know how long it takes to get past security there? Do you even know what a hybrid is? Do you know why we don’t say thank you?”
You blinked. Sukuna blinked. 
Silence.
And Sukuna knew today was going to be bullshit the second he saw your face instead of your brother’s. Your brother, who was usually all business. No stalling, no “wait I forgot the cash” antics. Just a head nod and a quick exit. Dependable, dry, vaguely annoying. 
You, however, were neither dry nor dependable. 
You were currently hyperventilating under a Jacaranda tree and babbling something about Harvard law school. He watched you for a moment, expression somewhere between a squint and a grimace, hands on his hips like he was preparing to build a shed or bury a body.
“…Are you quoting Legally Blonde right now?”
You paused mid-rant, sniffling. “I was watching it, like, two hours ago, and now I'm here. And I don’t even smoke, my brother just said go get the thing, and then you started talking about…couch-something? And I’m not even wearing proper shoes for this—”
Sukuna rolled his eyes, not because he didn’t care, but because that was his only way to delay a full-blown fuck me moment. He had heard of you before — vague mentions during other deals. Always framed around inconvenience:
“Can’t leave her alone too long,”
“Nah, she’s at home today, can’t risk the smell,”
“My sister's around, so not now.”
He expected a brat. A teen. Someone with a 100k Snapscore, a rhinestone phone case and a visible need for supervision. He did not expect someone basically his age, sitting in a puddle of heat and anxiety, with the kind of eyes that made you look twice and a mouth that couldn’t stop moving even if it wanted to. 
And for reasons he did not care to investigate, Sukuna found himself…listening. Not fake listening, actually listening.
Like when you started monologuing about how Elle Woods was judged just for wearing pink, and how your brother was now pulling the same kind of injustice by sending you into the unknown like a sacrifice to the zaza gods. “He said don’t say thank you, like that’s normal,” you sniffed, pacing now. “Am I supposed to just grab the bag and go? What if it’s the wrong one? Is this a test?”
“It's not a test,” Sukuna muttered, arms crossed, watching you with a half-lidded stare.
“I can't fail.”
“I'm not grading you.”
“But you could.”
He sighed, dragging a hand over his face, eyes twitching when you hiccuped in the middle of your next word. This was a nightmare. He checked his phone. Four missed deliveries. Fuck. “Call him again,” he barked, jutting his chin toward your phone.
“He’s not picking uppp,” you wailed, already dialing anyway. “And when he does, I'm gonna commit fratricide. That’s legal, right?” 
Then — like divine intervention — your brother answered. And immediately, your hand flew to your chest, your lip trembled, and your voice cracked like a war orphan on the verge of a ballad. “I don't know what to ask for, I didn't ask to be born into this family—!”
Sukuna winced as your voice pitched three octaves higher.
The call was short. Some loud cursing, some laughter, a few insults, and a loud “Stop fucking crying, Jesus, just get the platinum—” and that was that. You hung up and slumped like your skeleton gave out. “Here.” Sukuna shoved the baggie toward you. “Platinum OG. Sleep strain, nice body high. Pairs well with girl tears and whatever the hell you got going on in there.”
You didn’t even look up, just took it. And used the corner of his shirt — his shirt — to dab your damp lashes. He stared at you, down at your hand, then back at you.
“…Are you crying into my clothes right now?”
You nodded. “They’re cotton.” 
His jaw clicked. He wanted to groan. He wanted to throw his phone in a lake. Instead, he let out a long, nasal exhale. You looked up at him finally, cheeks flushed, eyelashes stuck together, still holding the damn bag in one hand like it might bite you. “Thank you,” you whispered, despite your brother’s explicit instructions. 
“You’re not supposed to say that,” he grunted. You smiled, faint and ruined and puffy. “I'll say sorry, too, if you stick around.”
And something in him — something warped and inconvenient — twitched. Because he could see it now. That part of him that usually wanted to sprint the fuck out of social interactions? Quiet. His eyes lingered on your face, your lashes, the smudge of stress-sweat and heat that made you glow. 
He sighed again. He could speedrun those other deliveries. Maybe swing by later. 
For fraternal check-ins, obviously. Not for you. Not because he liked you or anything.
☆ GOJO SATORU
You didn’t know what was more devastating — the fact that you spent nearly two hundred grand clawing away at an arcade machine for a limited edition Albedo figurine, or that the guy who actually wanted her didn’t even leave his house. No, he just bribed you into doing it for him. “Blue eyes hypnotise,” he called himself. Like a joke. Like a threat. Like a man who didn’t have any shame.
You only got his real name — Gojo Satoru — when he turned around and you caught a flash of his university ID tag, half-tucked behind a plushie keychain shaped like a pudding. He was apparently from the Engineering department, which was either a lie or an actual war crime, because nothing about the way he looked or acted said science. But there he was, in a dorm room that smelled like strawberry soda and fabric softener, crouched on the floor like a grown man summoning a demon from a display box. 
“Look at her,” he cooed, setting the Albedo figurine gently — tenderly — into her glass shrine. “She’s so misunderstood. Nobody gets her like I do.” You blinked at him from the edge of his futon, arms still sore from wrangling that claw machine like it owed you rent. 
“So…can I get the stuff now?”
He barely looked up, just pointed vaguely at the corner of his room — where Hatsune Miku was standing on a glass shelf in all her twin-tailed glory. But instead of a mic, she held a tiny bag of very clearly illegal herb in one plastic hand. You stared back at him, then back at Miku.
“Is this — is this some kind of themed display?” you asked. Gojo just beamed, pushing his glasses up his nose.
“Yeah! I’ve got Rin holding a grinder, Nezuko’s the designated lighter girl, and Saber — oh wait, lemme show you—”
He moved across the room, the wooden floors creaking under the weight of his sins and merch, to open another glass cabinet filled with boxed Nendoroids, switch cartridges, and an entire row of perfume bottles that you knew were only bought because they were collaboration exclusives. And the worst part? He was hot.
Glasses slipping down the bridge of his nose, oversized shirt that said “science is sexy” in pixel font, hair pulled back in a loose bun with a Hello Kitty clip. And those stupid, stupid blue eyes twinkling at you like a paywall.
“So. Ya like claw machines?”
“No,” you deadpan. “I like weed.”
He laughed — giggled, actually — like that was the most charming thing he’d heard all week. 
“We should hang out more,” he said, reaching for a heart-shaped tin box that he cracked open to reveal little wrapped edibles shaped like stars. “I trade limiteds for labor. Win me figures, get high for free. It’s a perfect ecosystem.”
You took the bag from Miku, still watching him with a healthy mix of horror and fascination. His room looked less like a place someone lived in and more like a walking otaku’s dreamscape. Frames on the wall — real glass, not Ikea — with signed prints. A projector setup. A heated kotatsu. Not even a fake one, actual imported goods. You spotted a collectors-only Hatsune Miku ita-bag on his chair and realized with chilling clarity—
This man was loaded. And somehow, dealing was just a hobby. “So you're rich,” you muttered, half to yourself. 
“No, I'm emotionally compensating,” he chirped, handing you a cola-flavored edible. “And high-key, Miku funds half my lifestyle. God bless licensing.” 
You didn’t even know what to say anymore. The za was yours, technically. but your soul? Your soul had been mortgaged. As you left, he waved from the door with his fingers wiggling, still barefoot, still smiling. 
“Bring me that Rem-Ram plush next time and I'll give you a freebie!”
You didn’t answer, just turned away clutching the Miku za, feeling thoroughly hypnotized.
Fucking nerd.
And as you left, Gojo Satoru is starting to spiral. 
Not in the tragic, tortured anime boy way (although he could do that too, he has the bone structure for it), but in the what if I am God’s strongest soldier but also emotionally constipated kind of way. Which, to be fair, is on brand. He's from the Engineering department, not Psychology — he doesn’t need therapy, he needs more shelf space for his waifus. Except now he’s wondering if he should detour to the Psych wing after all, because he’s not normal about you. Like, at all.
You showed up at his dorm with the Albedo figurine — the grail, the myth, the she who watches over the za with her plastic rack — and Gojo knew. He knew this was destiny. He didn’t talk to you directly, oh no, that would be too sane. 
He talked to Albedo instead. 
“Thank you for returning to me, my queen,” he whispered to her lovingly while unboxing, carefully peeling the protective plastic like he was unwrapping life itself. You were just… sitting on his futon, watching this happen. Watching this man ignore you in favor of a busty demon lady. And the worst part? You looked annoyed, which meant he was winning. 
“She's perfect,” he sighed dramatically, lifting the figure to the light like she was about to be baptized in his otaku holiness. “Better than any real girl.” 
You scoffed, and he heard it. Oh, he heard it all right. Success, he thought, the cogs in his brain wheezing like a dial-up modem. She's jealous. She’s spiraling. She wants to be my real girl now.
He had charisma. Not rizz — that word made his gums itch — but presence. Aura. The kind of deeply concerning magnetism that made people lose brain cells around him. He had a theme. Nezuko with the lighter, Rin with the grinder… even his plushies had roles. He wasn't like other dealers — he was aesthetic. 
You didn’t stand a chance.
Maybe you were his Zero Two. No, wait. Too pink. His Hori? No, that pairing was mid. Maybe you were his Faye Valentine, all mystery and menace and weird snack orders. Or maybe — maybe MAPPA would make an anime about the two of you. A rom-com, but the kind where the guy’s so stupid it becomes a tragedy. 
He could see the promo now: “The strongest dealer meets the one girl who got him to shut up.”  Bonus points if they animated his sparkly glasses glint just right. 
Maybe he could pull a few strings, call in a favor. Not that he was from an anime or anything, haha. Definitely not from that one. No, no. He's real. He's totally real.
You asked him if he had more edibles and he accidentally said, “Only if you say you love me,” before immediately covering it with a fake cough that sounded like a dying sim.  
“What?” you frowned. 
“Nothing,” he said, nearly choking. “I said… they’re gummy. Fruity. Ha-ha.”
Smooth. Like butter.
You rolled your eyes, but you didn’t leave. You stayed, kicked your shoes off, asked if he had wi-fi. And Gojo, who had a literal shrine of waifus across from his bed, thought to himself: Damn. Maybe I need to start making room on that shelf for a new figure called: the girl who brought me Albedo and accidentally stole my heart. Definitely not for dramatic reasons. Definitely not because he was projecting. 
Definitely not because, if he was from an anime, he’d want you in every single ending theme.
a/n sukuna's part is based off of a true story except my experience did not end in romance. i hope you enjoyed reading tho :P if you have any silly weed experiences please drop a confession in da ask-box 🫣 and yes, blue eyes hypnotize is a yo yo honey singh reference...
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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does fratboy!gojo actually like cherry or is it more lustful? like ik him making her wait to have sex but is that more of him wanting her first time to be special or cuz he likes her romantically and he knows she deserves a memorable first time?
okay okay so its a little confusing but here's the lore:
gojo likes cherry a lot, but he grew up without much love in his life, so he's kind of emotionally detached big oof.. he's not sure if he's ready to be in a relationship with anyone, including cherry. but, he still wants a reason for her to 'stay' with him, so teaching her all about sex is his best bet !!
i think they got together by maybe trying hooking up one time no strings attached, but she sprung it on him - the fact that she was a virgin. gojo was upset for a moment that you didn't tell him until the moment had come, but he realizes that if he sends her away he probably won't get to see/talk to her again :((
from there he prolly proposes the sex thing to her and she's elated ab it. the reason he wants to take it slow is bc partly he doesn't want it to end (if they have sex, it'll end bc that's what the agreement is) and also bc he wants her to have the best first time everr
she's been open ab her feelings when it comes to him, that she wants to date him, but gojo doesn't know what answer to give her bc he knows he really cares ab her but hes scared </3
she lwky just wants to fuck him alr #real
basically he really likes her + doesn't want this to end + he's kind of traumatized from childhood and doesn't know how to love someone
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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hey gorgeous <3
hey gorgeousest <3
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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can i be the cherry to your frat. OR I HAVE WORSE IDEAS.
yes u can be the cherry to my frat dont even gotta ask
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lacyblades · 1 month ago
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౨ৎ professor!nanami is, in the most blunt way, an overzealous munch.
you're sprawled on his desk in the quiet lecture hall after your desperate plea for extra credit, legs parted and vulnerable. the connection between oral sex and your gpa is fuzzy, but you aren't about to question it.
the brush of his nose against your clit sends a jolt through you. you're slick, so unbelievably wet it's pooling on the polished wood beneath your thighs. you squirm under his grip, but his strong hands keep you still, exactly where he wants you.
"s— sir," you choke out, your breath catching in your throat.
"kento, in private," he corrects, his voice a low hum. it feels right, somehow, with you laid out like this. his fingers trace your wetness before sliding one deep inside you.
"think you can handle more?" he murmurs, though it isn't a real question. he's going to make sure you do.
"yeah," you whimper, your eyes drifting shut as he adds another digit. the way he moves, the precise angle and pressure, is perfect, especially the way his fingers curl inside you like that, hitting all the right spots — and more.
who knew your finance professor had this side to him? definitely not as dull as debits and credits.
you come quickly, his touch surprisingly skilled and knowing. and then again, and again, because he seems utterly unable to stop himself. he laps up all your release, like a man starved, until you're a whiny, overstimulated mess.
"so… the extra credit?" you ask, your voice still shaky.
nanami waves a hand dismissively. "hm? we'll sort it out. don't fret, darling." and just like that, the sound of his belt unbuckling fills the quiet room.
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