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𝐆𝐑𝐀𝐕𝐈𝐓𝐘 : 𝐓𝐎𝐃𝐎𝐑𝐎𝐊𝐈 𝐒𝐇𝐎𝐔𝐓𝐎 𝐗 𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐃𝐄𝐑
𝐂𝐎𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐒: a snippet of vulcan medican officer shouto x starfleet captain reader, inspired by all the star trek au brainrot i had going on a couple weeks ago lmao. shouto is our handsome chief medical officer who just wants captain reader to stop getting herself so grievously injured every time the ship makes port, trying to prove to herself that she is worthy of the ship's command. (6.1k)
𝐓𝐀𝐆𝐒: afab fem reader (she/her pronouns), hurt/comfort, self-worth issues, implied child neglect, unreliable narrator, pre-relationship, some gore (reader sustains significant physical injury), sfw.
𝐍𝐎𝐓𝐄𝐒: tos is the only star trek i have seen all the way through, and the last time i watched any star trek was when i was down with the flu for a week in college lmao. i did some wiki digging and some googling but i did take some notable liberties with their comms units and other details are probably hella inaccurate to canon so my apologies to the trekkies!! dedicated to @/volatilematters for drawing me the most amazing vulcan shouto.
It was the crackling of your comms unit that roused you, the ping of an incoming call slicing through the fog of your sleep. You blinked awake, realizing you’d fallen asleep huddled in the corner of your cell, your neck stiff from being wedged awkwardly against the wall as you dozed.
You hurriedly accepted the comm, smiling blearily as First Officer Iida’s anxious expression filled the piece of your wrist unit’s screen that wasn’t obscured by your manacles.
“Captain,” he said solemnly, inclining his head.
You gave him a nod, suppressing a wince as the motion jarred your shoulder, pulling at the wound and sending a wave of hot pain radiating down to your fingers. You suspected it was dislocated, although that was immaterial at this point. You’d figure it out later in the privacy of your own quarters, when the rest of your crew had been seen to.
“Tenya,” you said, pulling on a grin. “It’s a relief to see you—what have you been able to pull together?”
Iida’s eyes slipped sideways to what you could tell was an inventory, a list of items you intended for the UA to present to your Xentauri captors. “Midoriya was able to put together a translator based on the audio snippets you took with your wrist unit. It’s calibrated for their language, so we should be able to communicate effectively.”
You nodded again, pleased with your crew’s progress. You suspected you were only in this mess in the first place because of your communication gap.
Xentauri-II.1ba, as it was officially charted on Federation mapping, was a newly discovered life-supporting planet that had yet to be thoroughly investigated. The Federation had first deployed a small science team to research conditions, but only weeks in, the unit had dispatched an emergency signal. Your ship, the UA had been the closest to receive it, and once decoded by Comms Officer Midoriya, the signal had pointed to the team being in severe danger, possibly under attack.
You’d immediately rerouted for Xentauri-II.1ba, and taken a small shuttle down to the research base with a few handpicked officers to investigate. Whereupon you’d of course been attacked by the planet’s inhabitants yourself.
You’d attempted to negotiate, but without a mapping of their language to yours yet established, your efforts were in vain. The Xentauri had taken your rescue crew prisoner too, hauled you back to what you guessed to be their capital city, and thrown you in with the research team.
They hadn’t seemed to want to kill you after the fight deescalated. Or known enough, for that matter, to relieve your crew of your communicators. Which pointed to a possible diplomatic solution still at hand.
“Perfect. What else?” you prompted Iida.
“Records of Federation history reworked to suit their level of technological advancement, a few non-invasive crop samples Ibara thinks will work well in their arid soil, some textiles and worked metals that roughly match their own dress that Midoriya thinks they may like, blankets, and—well, Shouto hasn’t given them up yet but we’re asking him for some species-agnostic hyposprays to represent our intention to help.”
Your stomach flipped at the mention of your Chief Medical Officer. You were going to be giving him a wide berth for the foreseeable future until you were certain he wouldn’t be able to note your injuries. He was the last person who needed to catch on to your weakness.
“He doesn’t want to give them over?” you asked.
Iida frowned. “He has not said as much, but I am getting the distinct impression he does not look well upon the Xentauri.”
You tossed Iida another tired grin. “How can he dislike them when we’ve never encountered them before? He’s just mad about the cleanup he’s gonna have to do on the crew. Tell Shouto it’s Captain’s orders and I want at least five.”
Iida made a noise of assent, pushing up his glasses. “I will. We should be there in precisely twenty Galactic standard minutes. Is there anything else you wish me to assemble before the podship departs?”
You shook your head. “You’ve done a good job, thank you, Tenya. Let’s see how the negotiation goes now that we have Izuku’s translator. If we have to do it in phases, please prioritize the return of the research team first, then the crew. I will go last—is that understood?”
Iida looked like he’d swallowed a lemon, but predictably, he nodded. He was loyal to your command, reliable to a fault. You were so often thankful for it.
“Understood, Captain. I will see you shortly,” he replied.
“Thank you, Tenya,” you said, before ending the comm.
Mina perked up in her own cell, a few yards away from yours. “Party bus incoming?”
You laughed, giving the xenobiologist a wink. She’d been good company the last day or so, easily able to keep her spirits up despite your capture and able to help you reassure the rest of your crew that things were well in hand. You were especially thankful, as she had been inches away from not being here. You’d moved in front of the knife meant for her without thinking, catching it in your own shoulder instead of her throat. It super sucked for you, but it was better a shoulder wound than a dead friend.
“Your shower and breakfast beckon, m’lady,” you joked.
Mina groaned appreciatively, scrubbing a manacled hand through her candy-pink hair. “I think I’m gonna take an old fashioned one. Real water and everything.”
You made a sympathetic sound. A water shower sounded luxurious, and some part of you desperately craved one too. But hot water was not good for most injuries, particularly a dislocated shoulder and what you were also certain was a broken ankle. Not to mention the stinging effect it might have on your stab wound and the litany of cuts and bruises that banded the rest of your body.
You were going to have to wait a little longer until you’d healed up to partake.
“We should wake the rest of the crew,” you said, motioning to the couple of uniformed lumps in Mina’s cell and the few beyond.
Mina nodded, and set about poking your teammates awake, calling excitedly to the next couple of cells down.
Both your crew and the Federation research team were awake by the time the Xentauri guard came to fetch you, exactly 20 minutes on the dot, as Iida had promised. They said something in their twining, sinuous tones, shuffling to the doors of your cells. They were humanoid but strange to look at, their skin waxen grey and necks elongated like Earthen giraffes, sprouting into wide, ridged faces almost like the Ferengi. A set of eight fingers—as long and spindly as their necks—protruded from the cuffs of their shirts, made from a light material like a linen, though their thinness belied a ferocious strength.
It reminded you a little of looking at Shouto, his terrifying Vulcan strength buried under a deceptively beautiful visage.
The Xentauri’s strength was on full display as a guard reached out and hauled you unceremoniously to your feet. They shepherded you impatiently out of the prison, into the harsh blue cast of the Xentauri sun.You stumbled along with them, swearing under your breath every time you took a step with your right foot. Pain lanced up your leg, lodging in your throat, and you grit your teeth, sweat building quickly beneath your uniform.
It was almost a relief to be forced down when you finally reached your destination—a sandy expanse of earth outside or a huddle of buildings erected from a purplish, glittering rock. Your head swam, and your vision whited out for a moment as you hit your knees.
When you recovered, you could see the crew of the UA was already assembled in the lot. Iida stood at ease in front of a small group of expedition officers, flanked by Izuku, Tokoyami, and—you paled to see it—Shouto.
Your Chief Medical Officer looked predictably perfect in the light of the Xentauri sun, the blue catching in the silver of his hair, fading into the blue of his uniform. It played over his broad shoulders and glinted off of the cool metal of the phaser strapped to his thigh. It also underscored his expression, which was pissed—or as pissed as a Vulcan could look, anyway.
It was undetectable if you weren’t already intimately familiar with their baseline expressions. But you were familiar enough with Shouto’s—had been his schoolmate once—and so you caught the tiniest narrowing of his eyes at the corners, the barest hint of a scrunch between his perfect eyebrows as that heterochromatic gaze flicked over you.
Oh yeah. Pissed big time.
You tried to project an air of strength and confidence as he looked you over, though you imagined your stay in Xentauri prison had not been kind to you. You knew you were covered in dust and debris, and you watched Shouto’s gaze snag on the rend in your uniform over your stab wound. It was a mess of dried blood surrounded by some very heavy and very gross bruising.
Dignity and command, you told yourself as your vision fuzzed a little again. You could totally still project dignity and command.
Izuku stepped forward with the translator, offering some opening words that, on this side of the lot, came out in the Xentauri language, sibilant and twisting. One of the Xentauri, dressed in a purple linen that nearly matched the stone of the buildings around you, stepped forward, replying in a hiss of words.
You listened with half an ear as negotiations commenced, trying to keep your focus on staying upright. The Xentauri sun burned through the fabric of your uniform, and the air was biting and dry. You pointedly did not look at Shouto again, keeping your eyes trained on Izuku and Iida as they produced the bargaining chips you’d ordered.
You were pleased when, as you expected, the Xentauri accepted with little delay. You could only just catch snatches of Federation Standard as Izuku and Iida spoke between the translated layers of Xentauri, but you were able to gather that the Federation’s arrival was perceived as an attempt to undermine Xentauri territorial sovereignty.
Once it was made clear that you were not on any sort of political venture, however, you were ceded back into Federation custody with no more ceremony than a box of pastries. They seemed eager to receive the gifts you had pulled together, and not very interested in further violence.
You watched, relieved, as your crew were set free of their restraints and helped back towards the podship by their teammates. You shook out your own hands happily as a Xentauri guard freed you from your manacles as well.
You clambered to your feet, biting back a small scream as you put weight on your right leg. And then you forced yourself to pace evenly over to where Iida stood with the remaining crew, inclining your head gratefully. You waved away the rest of the crew, huddling up with your First and Communications Officers.
“Well handled,” you told them. Izuku flushed beneath his freckles, always pleased, and Iida saluted you. “I’d like ten minutes for a sonic shower and a change of uniform, then I’d like all heads of departments at the bridge for a debrief.”
Iida nodded. “I will arrange it.”
“Thank you,” you said, ignoring the way your head throbbed. “I’m certain you have also already drafted a report to Star Fleet. I’d like to review it collectively to ensure the Xentauri are fairly represented and to request permission for continued negotiation with them for Federation Science re-access to their planet.”
Iida saluted.
“After that, please consider yourself off duty,” you said. “Thank you for your overtime to get the crew back. We can transition ship command back to me and I will cover your remaining shift into my upcoming—-”
“You will not,” Shouto’s low tone cut through your order.
You startled at his proximity, the statement issued from just above your right temple. When you titled your head to look back at him, your shoulder lanced with pain and your vision swam faintly again. You forced it all down, shooting Shouto an impatient look.
“Respectfully—”
“You are not cleared for duty,” Shouto said.
It was lucky the rest of the crew had already hastened towards the podship or you might have strangled him for his lack of deference. But Shouto had a knack for timing—he never disobeyed you in front of the crew, never even came close to a whisper of undeferential behavior unless it was with Tenya and Izuku, both of whom you knew he trusted completely. He was too canny.
“I don’t need to be cleared, it’s just a couple of scratches,” you informed him archly.
“I believe I am qualified to make that assessment on my own,” Shouto told you, his heterochromatic gaze fastening to your face as he stepped around you to join the circle of your officers. You were altogether too aware of the breadth and height of him as he moved, a tiny thrill of fear zipping down your spine.
Shouto was the only person on the ship with the authority to strip you of command should he see fit. And you were determined for him to never see fit.
“What luck there is no need for you to,” you said, sweetly.
A scarlet eyebrow rose a scant millimeter, which to Vulcans amounted to a look of polite incredulity. “That would be in violation of Regulation 8.667-f of the Medical Standard. Which requires a medical officer to clear return for all officers sustaining injury on duty, including command. Especially when you have clearly been stabbed.”
Damn him.
“Details,” you told him. “Plus I’m sure you’ll be busy clearing all your other patients. I can duck in a little later to see if Hagakure—”
“My staff will see to the other crew,” Shouto said. “You are my priority, Captain.”
A little thrill zinged through your veins again, fear and something else you did not care to examine.
Iida and Izuku did not help matters by nodding in agreement, Iida giving you a short bow. “We will see to the situation on the bridge, Captain, until you are cleared for return. Please make sure you are in good health.”
You valiantly fought down a scowl as you dismissed them. “My gratitude.”
Izuku and Iida saluted and turned for the podship, leaving you alone with the most annoying Vulcan in the galaxy. You watched them go, not turning to Shouto until they had cleared most of the way.
“You first, doctor,” you motioned him towards the ship as well, determined to walk behind him so he wouldn’t catch any sign of a limp in your step.
Shouto didn’t move, however, blinking down at you. His handsome face was impassive, the strong line of his jaw and plush mouth perfectly, deceptively at ease.
“Do you so object to walking with me, Captain?” he asked.
You shook your head. “I will cover the rear.”
Shouto blinked again. “I am the only one with a phaser between us.”
If you didn’t feel on the verge of passing out, you could have torn out your own hair. Did he need to be so difficult!
“I insist,” you said, trying your best to look polite and innocent.
Shouto’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “Either you are deliberately avoiding mention of another injury or you are injured so badly as to have forgotten it. In which case a mandate of relief from the captainship would almost certainly be required while you recover your memory—”
You reached out and slapped a hand over his mouth, hissing, “I did not forget an injury.”
“Then you must inform me,” he said into your fingers. His tone sounded more entreating than commanding, and for some reason that annoyed you. There was no reason to be concerned.
“Nothing confirmed, possible dislocation,” you said vaguely, pulling your hand away. It tingled a little with the echo of how his mouth had moved against it.
Shouto’s gaze dropped from your face down your body, his mouth pursing in a sweet little downturn. “Where?”
You gritted your teeth. “Shoulder. Possibly one ankle.”
Shouto immediately dropped to his knees in front of you, startling you. You took a reflexive step backwards, letting out a cry when it jostled your right foot. You just barely managed not to go down hard, recovering yourself only by the sudden grip Shouto had on your waist, supporting you.
He was, of course, immediately able to tell which ankle had pained you. His long, elegant fingers reached for the hem of your right leg, rolling it up in a gentle motion. You watched the top of that red-and-white head tilt, and heard the soft intake of his breath as he caught the swelling that had reached the edges of your boot.
His expression could almost be termed thunderous, even on a human, when he looked back up at you. “You were going to walk on a broken ankle,” he said accusingly.
“Oh? Is it broken?” you tried, pasting on an expression of surprise.
Which immediately turned to a yelp of genuine surprise when Shouto rolled nimbly back to his feet, sweeping his arms under you, avoiding your right shoulder.
“Shouto—!” you squeaked, your voice strangled.
“You knew,” he said firmly, tucking you close to his chest. Your face heated at the press of him along your side, warm and firm and harder with muscle than a medical officer should have been allowed. He smelled like sterilants and some warm, expensive cologne, a little unearthly in profile. Possibly composed of Vulcan plants.
It made your lightheadedness somehow even worse, and if he didn’t put you down now you were afraid you might pass out for real.
“It’s probably just a minor fracture,” you insisted, as he carried you towards the podship. You shifted, ignoring the flare of pain in your shoulder as you did, trying to clamber out of his arms. He refused to be dislodged, ducking deftly through the door of the podship and nodding at a crewman as the officer closed it behind the two of you.
You couldn’t bear to look at the crewman’s face, burning with embarrassment at being carried over the threshold like a fucking princess.
Then Shouto had the audacity to buckle you into the podship seat himself, like your arms were broken too, and arranged himself stiffly in the seat next to you.
His mouth was turned down in a frown when you glanced at him, and the expression did not so much as flicker the entire flight back to the UA. It was only when you tried to insist you could walk to medbay yourself that Shouto gave you the flattest, most flinty-eyed look you’d ever seen from him. He knelt before you again, helping you unfasten your jumpseat buckle, and ignored your protests as he pulled your uninjured arm up over a strong shoulder, gathering you up in his arms again.
You squeezed your eyes as he moved through the halls, both to avoid seeing the judgment on your crew’s faces and because the way the walls were starting to spin in front of your eyes was making you a little nauseous.
You appeared to be the first of the captured crew to make into medbay, so it was blessedly empty of people as Shouto bore you through it. He carried you right into his office and set you on the gently medbed in the corner, your least favorite spot on the entire ship.
Then he stood in front of you, and put hands on his hips. You ignored the way it made his biceps pull and flex under the fabric of his uniform.
“I am going to have to cut your boot off of you,” Shouto informed you. “Your shirt as well. It’s stuck in your wounds and I will need to reopen them a little to cut it out.”
Your cheeks heated with the idea of being bare before him, but he was a medical professional. And also that was disgusting—you wanted to get your shirt out of your own body as fast as possible. “Sure—that’s fine.”
Shouto hummed to himself, a low, soft tone in the back of his throat as he moved to a drawer of equipment beside the med bed. “Thank you,” he said, drawing out a device with a wickedly thin, circular blade attached.
You did not like the look of it, and hoped that famous Vulcan precision was everything it was cracked up to be.
Shouto knelt before you again, carefully applying the saw and pulling the fabric of your boot gently away from your skin. It whirred softly, and in a matter of moments you felt the loosening of the fabric, and your boot thunked heavily to the floor.
“I will do your shirt now,” Shouto told you.
You nodded, breath catching in your chest as he leaned over you. Those long fingers slid under the collar of your uniform, easing it away from the fragile skin of your neck. You flushed hotly when Shouto’s fingers met the edge of your bra strap, too, and he paused, going strangely still.
You thought you caught the hint of a blue flush at the top of one high cheekbone, and you quickly bit out a “sorry” at him, cheeks burning.
Then the saw whirred to life again, and Shouto angled it down until it had cut a clean line down your shirt. He pulled it off of you, very gently inching it away from where it had stuck into your stab wound and various other cuts with your dried blood. He murmured a warning before each, and you bit back a groan as it re-tore open the skin in those spots, determined not to look like a little baby.
Shouto tossed your shirt in the biohazard bin with perfect aim, his eyelashes sweeping down across his cheeks as he took stock of all the injuries that had collected across your torso.
You looked down at yourself, noting several deep cuts you hadn’t noticed before and a contusion in the shape of one of the Xentauri’s feet. You also noted how much blood had soaked into the cups and straps of your bra from your stab wound, and chalked it up to a lost cause. When you looked back up, Shouto looked kind of angry again.
“I will administer painkillers via hypospray and a topical antibacterial to your stab wound first,” he said, his low voice flat.
You nodded your assent, and Shouto went to the drawer again, gathering up the things he’d need for you. “Then I will assess your remaining injuries via tricorder. I may need to manually reset your shoulder. Your ankle should be healable with the osteogenic stimulator. Is this acceptable?”
You nodded again tiredly. “You can do whatever you want with me.”
Shouto fumbled the hypospray, whipping around to stare at you. A blue flush crawled all the way up his pointed ears.
You could almost hear the rush of your own blood to your ears when you realized how you’d just sounded. “I mean—uhhhhh. That wasn’t to imply—”
“If I did what I wanted with you,” Shouto said, drawing himself up. “You would never leave medbay again.”
You blinked, unsure if that was the threat it sounded like. Meaning, he wouldn’t let you go back to command for your own good? Or he wanted to murder you himself? Or—?
You burned with embarrassment. You had long wanted Shouto’s approval, or at the very least to avoid him seeing right through you to the poor little wretch you’d been before Starfleet, unable to take care of your own mother, surrendered into state care for your uselessness.
You’d wanted it even back at the academy, realizing how smart he was, how straightforward and empathetic. You trusted his judgment more than anyone else on this ship. And so you wanted him to think you were a capable captain, someone worthy of his respect, too. Not some idiot who could barely handle herself who needed to be kept from command to protect the rest of the crew.
You stayed silent, shame burning through you. You would just have to try harder in the future, make him see that you could be relied on to take care of this crew, including him. You would prove yourself capable.
Shouto moved around you with the ease of long practice, pressing the hypospray to the back of your neck. Then he held the tricorder over you, his mismatched gaze tracking across the screen, that microscopic scrunch appearing between his brows again.
“You have been stabbed, dislocated your shoulder, fractured a finger, broken your ankle, torn your MCL. You have also sustained significant bruising on your right torso, left thigh, and right shin,” he said. “You have a variety of small cuts and other abrasions across roughly five percent of your epidermis.”
His voice sounded kind of funny, and his handsome face waved in front of you like a flag in the wind. A weird feeling of giddiness and relief swept over you, and you realized the painkillers he’d just given you were starting to hit.
“Ohhhhh that feels so good,” you said, stupidly, feeling yourself slip forward. Your head lolled onto Shouto’s shoulder.
You could feel his inhale, and then his arms came around you. “I—Yes, I can do it from this position, then. I will need to reset your shoulder. I need to apply a local anesthetic.”
“Do your thing,” you said into his neck. He smelled really good.
Shouto’s next breath was uneven, and long fingers grasped you just above your bicep, the cold touch of the hypospray at your shoulder joint. “I will proceed.”
You closed your eyes. “Whatever you want.”
A feeling of numbness overtook your shoulder, and then the hypospray disappeared. A large hand braced against your back and Shouto said, “I am going to reset it now.”
You nodded. “Sounds nice.”
There was a strange feeling of pressure, a slide that you did not like, and then—a sense of relief. “Oh, it’s back in!”
“Yes,” Shouto confirmed. Then, hesitantly, “I will need to move you to work on your stab wound and fractures.”
You heard yourself make a grunt of disapproval. You did not like the sound of that. Moving sounded like the worst thing anyone had ever asked of you, actually. “Y’ can ignore them, ‘ll get ‘m later.”
Shouto paused. “I would be professionally negligent not to fix them.”
You frowned. “Doesn’t matter, I’ll get ‘m. Thank you.”
“They��matter to me,” Shouto said. There was something in his voice you didn’t like, something a little dark like you had displeased him. You didn’t want to displease him.
You were interrupted from responding, however, by a soft knock at the door. Shouto hesitated, then called for whoever it was to come in, and you heard Hagakure’s bright tone from over his shoulder.
“Oh! Is that the captain—?” she said. “Is she—?”
“I gave her Metorapan,” Shouto said. “Please close the door behind you.”
“Oh nothing but the top shelf for our captain, huh,” Hagakure laughed. “Explains why she’s all over you right now. She say anything crazy yet?”
It took an inhuman amount of effort to lift your head from Shouto’s chest to glare over his shoulder at her. Only to find she was missing from view, the chameleon skin of her alien species picking up the light reflections in the ship’s environment. She had to consciously remember to be visible sometimes.
“I am not all over him,” you said. “And as I was just explaining, I am done an’ ready to debrief now.”
Hagakure shimmered into view, her mouth turned up into a grin. “With an open stab wound?”
You blinked. Shouto covered you almost completely from view. How could she—?
“Mina says it was meant for her but Captain took it right in the shoulder instead. Didn’t even go down, just tried to negotiate with the Xentauri right through it,” Hagakure reported.
Shouto’s sigh ruffled your hair. “I am unsurprised to hear it.”
You felt another frown pull at your mouth. He probably thought you were an idiot for almost getting one of your crew injured. You hated how incapable you were, too, but you’d at least saved her from the worst of it, and you’d learn the lesson for next time. Next time, you would prove yourself for sure. You would earn the command of this ship, not just on paper but in practice too.
“How is the crew?” you managed, forcing the feelings down.
“None so injured as you,” Hagakure said. “They said you took the worst of it for them, and kept things from escalating. A couple of minor fractures here and there and some bruising but otherwise everyone is safe. The research crew on the other hand, is a little worse for wear—bet they wish you had been there for their arrest too.”
You snorted. Nobody wished that.
“Nothing we can’t fix though,” Hagakure said. “I’ll send you the report Mina gave, Shouto, on Cap’s injury so you have it, and send the treatment records for your review when we’re done.”
“Thank you,” Shouto said.
“I wanted to check if there’s any help you need from me, before I go back to supervise?” she asked.
Shouto shook his head.
You shook your head also, detaching from Shouto reluctantly. The room was cold without him against you. “Thank you for the report on the crew. Can you comm Tenya on the way out to let him know I will be there shortly to debrief?”
Hagakure stared at you. “You’re still stabbed, Captain.”
You blinked and looked down, noting your lack of shirt as well. When had that—? “Oh. That.”
Hagakure made a noise like she was suppressing a laugh and let herself out, the door closing firmly behind her.
Before you could make your excuses to Shouto, he’d eased an arm behind your shoulder and was tipping you over to lay on the cot.
“You cannot be cleared to return to duty until your injuries are addressed and the Metorapan wears off,” he told you. “You will need to sleep it off for a few hours after we are done.”
As he had anticipated it, his hand flew to your shoulder as you tried to sit up, pressing you back down. “I don’t need a few hours,” you said.
“You will have them regardless,” Shouto replied.
“I’ve already taken too much time,” you said, giving him a quick smile. See how ready you were to return to work?
Shouto’s perfect mouth pulled downwards a scant inch, and your eyes tracked the movement. “You are a very bad patient, as usual,” he said.
You rolled your eyes. You were a very bad everything. You didn’t also want to be a bad captain.
Shouto’s mouth opened, his eyelashes fluttering in surprise. “Is that what you think?” he asked, and you realized you’d maybe said that last bit aloud. “You believe you are a bad captain?”
A sudden flicker of fear flared to life in your chest.
To admit doubt was also to be a bad captain. You could not show hesitation, not when you were meant to be the leader of this starship. Shouto himself could not trust you if he knew you were not perfectly sure of yourself at all times.
“No,” you said.
Shouto watched your face. “No?”
Your head throbbed, and a bone deep exhaustion settled over you, tugging at your eyelids. But you watched him back, trying to blink through the feeling.
“I,” you started, then stopped yourself when you realized it wouldn’t be quite true to say you were a good captain. Shouto wasn’t stupid. “I do my best to protect th’ crew. Will always do my best to protect every member of th’ UA.”
A tiny little frown marred the perfection of Shouto’s face again. You reached up, smoothing it, and watched as a bluish green flush overtook his features again.
Vulcans blushed blue. You were probably grossing him out. You took your hand away.
“You take care of most of the crew,” Shouto allowed. “Every single member of the crew but one. There is a notable exception.”
Shit. Who had you failed? How had you failed? Normally you knew, were perfectly and objectively aware of every single time a strategy of yours had not gone as intended, had worked to make up the learning after and never make the mistake again.
But it was Shouto’s job to pull you from command if you were unfit. And if you were negligent enough in your duties like this, not even see the the things you were missing—
“D’you plan to relieve me of command?” you asked. Your face burned again, the question having slipped out before you were ready.
Shouto looked shocked—surprise taking over more of his features than you had ever seen on a Vulcan before.
“What?” he asked.
“Because I let them get hurt. Who is it?” you asked.
Shouto appeared speechless for a long moment. “People will always get hurt on missions like ours. You have protected the crew better than anyone I could think of. Your strategic thinking in times of crises is your area of expertise, and I have no doubt in your abilities. If I were to relieve you of command, I would see double the numbers of crew members in here after every mission.”
Your head swam, and you flushed with embarrassment, squirming uncomfortably with the praise. It didn’t answer your question. Why was he being so hard to understand?
“But you said there was someone I don’t protect. Like a routine failure.”
Shouto raised a hand, his long fingers skirting around the edge of your stab wound. “The only person you do not look after is yourself.”
You blinked, subsiding under his hand. Yourself? That was his problem?
Shouto’s handsome face spasmed again and you could tell you’d said that aloud too.
“Yes, that is my problem,” he said.
“Oh well that’s fine then,” you answered, although you were a little mystified.
Look after yourself? What was there even to look after? You had a good job, and your own sonic shower, and hot food whenever you wanted it, provided you weren’t temporarily behind bars on some backwater planet. You had the chance to earn the trust of people you respected, some of the best in the galaxy in their professions, and—many months into your mission—several blossoming friendships with Iida, Izuku, Mina, and Hagakure. You had a literal starship at your command, a place you were beginning to belong.
The only thing you could want for was Shouto’s respect too.
But you would earn that in time. You would.
“You already have it,” Shouto said, his voice low and intimate. It made you flush again, your heart beating kicking up somewhere into your throat.
“I do?” you asked.
Shouto inclined his head, looking you in the face.
“I will make it clear to you more in the future,” he said, then leaned over you, reaching for some device. You reveled in his warmth and closeness for a moment, until he pulled back with something you recognized as an osteogenic stimulator. “As well as other areas of my regard.”
You blinked, wondering what that meant.
“It is not a conversation that is right to have when you are not in possession of your faculties,” Shouto said. “But perhaps it will convince you to take better care of yourself.”
You blinked again sleepily, having trouble thinking straight now that the immediate problem had been addressed and you’d been horizontal for so long. Shouto did not think you needed to be relieved of duty. Shouto respected you.
You watched him work blearily, his long fingers fiddling with some of the settings on the simulator. It was strangely hypnotic to observe, and another wave of exhaustion washed through you, weighing you down to the table.
“In the interim I will take care of you. Until, and even after, you are able,” Shouto promised.
“That…sounds really nice,” you said absently, wondering if maybe you could just catch a couple minutes’ rest while he worked.
“You can sleep. I will be here when you wake up,” Shouto said, trailing the simulator down to your ankle.
His touch was sure and gentle, and his voice was too.
Maybe it would be fine then, to just take a short respite.
You closed your eyes. And under Shouto’s careful watch, you let yourself rest.
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GURLLLLLLLL
YOUR INTERPRETATION OF FALENA HAS ME FROTHING.
The most correct interpretation of Falena I've ever seen. I need to draw 17 of him.
OMGDDJDUEHDURHEDU THANK YOU DFHDJEHD


I TOOK ME A WHILE TO SOLVE HIM OUT BUT I QUITE HAPPY THAT YALL SEEMED TO ENJOY IT????!!!
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Great and now there's this. Theres truly no room for an ounce of complacency this is a direct attack on queer creatives.

Here's a link to the whole thread for more context
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This sounds like something Anaxa would do
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sigh...... here he is my precious my baby the love of my life
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Phainon flirts like he's been hired by the stars to make you swoon before dinner. he'll stop mid battle just to say something like, “If I die today, let it be known it was after seeing the angle of your smile. Tragic, but worth it.” He says things like “My heart trembles like a violin every time you breathe,” and he's not kidding. every sentence is dripping in sugar and sin, but beneath the playful glimmer in his eyes is a heat that makes your throat catch. he'll twirl a flower into your hair without warning, then press his forehead to yours and whisper, “I’d let kingdoms fall if you told me it made you smile.” half the time you're laughing, half the time you're too stunned to reply, complimenting him with a smile— he'd gasp when you flash a subtle smile to him, like he had been shot and approved by Mnestia, now he's the one swooning over you. and if he ever thinks he's losing your attention? he'll kneel infront of you while holding your hand like its a sacred duty and say, “If I must compete with the world for you... then let the world prepare for war.”
So yes. Phainon flirts like he’s writing poetry during an eclipse.
And somehow—it works.
Anaxagoras flirts like a man who read six romance novels and decided to try a thesis on them. he hands you a graph titled “Increase in Heart Rate When You’re Nearby” and genuinely believes this is romantic (…it kind of is). you'll be sitting together quietly, and he'll murmur:
“There is a gravity to you. Like celestial orbit. I find myself returning, again and again, no matter how far I calculate escape vectors.” you laugh. he looks mildly concerned. "That was a metaphor. Did it… fail to translate?" he'd be memorizing the exact angle you tilt your head when curious , bringing you three types of tea just to test which one best stabilizes your mood patterns, staring at you like you're a philosophical riddle he never wants to solve. and sometimes… just sometimes… he stammers. when you look too pretty. when you call his name. when you kiss the corner of his mouth.
“I—ah. Yes. That… was also... emotionally significant.”
you're pretty sure the next paper he submits to the Grove will be titled about “Love As Quantum Entanglement.”
Mydeimos doesn’t mean to flirt half the time— but he's stupidly good at it. he'll hand you a drink and say, “Eat something. You skipped lunch. Again.” like it’s a threat and a love confession. is there the word 'flirting' in the kremnoan language? soon. for now he just… protects. offers you the bigger portion of food. ghosting his hand on your lower back in crowds, giving death stares for as long as possible to anyone who dares interrupt you looking at the cafe menu, even when you've been staring for almost 10 minutes, the waiting line is already long yet he stares sharp, but when you turn your attention to him, he's already looking at you like a lion cub. he ruffles your hair when you take the petal off his face. but every action towards you is deliberate, lowkey, intimate.
like he's memorized your habits in no time. his voice is always low, steady. It's not about what he says— it's how his smile curls sideways, his hand faint but lightly lingering on yours. if you tease him, he'll raise an eyebrow, while muttering something like “don’t start,” but the tips of his ears go pink. it’s devastating. soft and low, one sentence while you're half-asleep against him, “I’d tear the world apart if it meant you’d sleep safe.” that's Mydeimos flirting. by being your shield—and daring you to fall for him without ever asking.
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saw a fanart of phainon with a samoyed on x but i lost the art so now i cant stop thinking about neighbor!phainon with a big ass dog that seems to really really like you for some reason… (827 wc)
Every morning at around 7:13 sharp, Phainon jogs past the little house across the street—the one with the white picket fence, overflowing flower boxes, and you, standing in the garden with a watering can in hand like some kind of deity. And every morning without fail, his heart does a small, embarrassing thing in his chest.
Snowy, his overly fluffy white Samoyed, always pulls just a little harder on her leash whenever they near your home. She seems to know the routine: jog, slow down near the garden, and let Phainon stare like a fool. She doesn’t mind. In fact, Snowy adores you—almost as much as he does.
It’s been like this for months, ever since he first moved into the neighborhood. He still remembers the day you knocked on his door, smiling with a small potted jade plant in your hands.
“Welcome,” you had said, “This little guy’s low-maintenance. Good for busy people and forgetful ones.” You’d grinned, and Phainon had forgotten every single word he meant to say back.
The jade plant still sits proudly on his windowsill, the only living thing in his house that isn’t him and Snowy. It thrives there, a constant reminder of the pretty neighbor with dirt under their fingernails and sunlight in their smile.
He can talk to everyone else, but something about you short-circuits his brain. Every time you wave or say good morning, he would grow redder than the tomatoes you have growing in your garden and he’d greet you back awkwardly. There are also times when you’d make conversation and ask about his plans for the weekend, how he’s been doing lately, but the most he could get himself to say were short responses that make him seem rude if not for the way he keeps on stumbling over his words cutely.
Snowy is used to it by now. She’s the only one who sees how gone her human is. She sits patiently while he pauses his jog to sneak glances over the hedge. Sometimes, she even tilts her head like she’s judging him.
But today, Snowy feels like rebelling a bit.
Phainon is inside, halfway through replying to an email, when he realizes the house is suspiciously quiet.
“Snowy?” he calls.
No jingle of tags. No soft bark. Then he checks the yard. The gate is ajar.
“Oh no.”
Meanwhile, you are elbow-deep in soil, humming to yourself as you re-pot some plants when a familiar white fluffball bounds into your yard.
“Hey, girl,” you say, smiling as she nuzzles into your shoulder. “Did you sneak out?”
You don’t mind the interruption. You’ve grown fond of the dog over the past few months. She’s a morning staple, after all—like dew and sunshine and the smell of mint.
You get rid of your gloves to scratch behind her ears and sit with her for a bit on your porch steps, letting her rest her massive head on your lap.
Still, you figure you should take her home before Phainon runs out panicking.
You brush dirt off your knees, give her a pat, and walk her across the street.
Phainon opens the door the moment you knock, eyes wide, phone in hand, wearing a hoodie that still clings to the scent of laundry detergent and just a hint of panic.
“I—I didn’t even realize—she must’ve pushed the gate, I—I’m so sorry—” he stumbles over every word, his hands awkwardly hovering in the air like he’s not sure whether to take Snowy or run inside and never come out again.
You just laugh gently. “It’s okay. She came to visit. We had a nice little chat.”
“Oh. Uh. Good. Good,” he says, nodding too much. “She, um, likes you a lot.”
“I could tell,” you say, giving Snowy a fond scratch before she trots back inside.
Phainon opens his mouth, maybe to thank you again, maybe to finally say something coherent. But instead, he says:
“You… have really nice soil.”
You blink, startled. Then you smile. “Thanks. I compost.”
He flushes so hard it reaches his ears. “Right. Of course. That’s… smart.”
There’s a moment of silence. Then he clears his throat. “Anyway,” he says, rubbing the back of his neck, “Thanks for bringing her back. I—I’ll, uh, fix the gate.”
You give him a look that’s kind and amused all at once. “See you tomorrow, Phainon.”
And he can only nod, already wondering how he’ll mess it up next time.
Later that evening, Snowy lays her head on his lap, letting out a huff that sounds suspiciously like judgment. He sighs.
“I know,” he mutters. “But… I’ll talk to them properly. Someday.”
Snowy gives him a look that clearly says you’ve been saying that for months, but even so, she licks his hand, like she believes in him.
And tomorrow, like always, they’ll jog past your house again. Maybe then he’ll finally be able talk to you without fumbling and ask you out on a date.
Maybe.
© 2025 kominigiru.
note: i was supposed to post this yesterday night but i fell asleep while proofreading 😭 then when i woke up my phone was dead lol
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drinking beverage. having to pee. drinking beverage. having to pee. what’s next? drinking beverage and then having to pee? fucking endless
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medieval knight raising the visor on his helm just so you can see him rolling his eyes
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Every day the water grows warmer and things get a bit scarier. Please be safe.
You don't have to face the evils of the world alone.
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kumicho kita…………… the tattoo……….. dee!!!!!!!!!!
(x)
kita comes home with a nasty gash just below his wrist late one evening.
you spot the trail of blood on the bathroom floor first, the splatters of red a gruesome, stark contrast against the white marble tiles. pushing open the half ajar door, you hear kita's tongue click against his teeth, breath catching on a stilted inhale of pain as cool water from the sink runs over his marred skin.
his gun sits on the countertop beside him, another smear of blood lingering on the barrel. something tells you that doesn't belong to him.
"ya should be sleepin'," he says without looking up as you pad over toward him.
"you need two hands to clean that and wrap it up properly."
kita lifts his head, gaze falling on the deep red kimono he gifted you just before your wedding. he stares at you for a moment, at the intricate, floral designs that run its length. he blinks slowly.
"ya look good in red," he nods before turning the sink back on to wash away the blood that continues to ooze from the deep cut.
the words are soft, quiet.
and yet you shudder like a dandelion in the breeze.
"can't say the same for you."
kita looks at you, face twisting in something that might just be a smile. and he laughs.
(you've never seen him laugh.)
(he rarely smiles.)
your thumb brushes against the inside of your hand, the tip resting against the cool metal of your wedding band.
--
kita tells himself that keeping you safe is doing his duty enough as your husband.
he doesn't need to touch you, to bed you.
to fuck you like he imagines most nights.
but when he sits down atop the closed toilet lid, as you stand between his spread thighs as you bandage up his wrist—
as your fingers slowly, carefully slide over the tattoo—
(the tattoo of a flower that you frantically made him pull over for one day shortly after your engagement. he'd leaned against the side of his car, hands shoved in his pockets as he watched you carefully traipse through a field of them on the side of the road.
"i've never seen these grow like this around here," you'd called out to him, face brighter than the sunshine beating down overhead.
he'd plucked one when you weren't looking.
the dried petals still lie pressed between the pages of a well-worn book on his nightstand.)
kita watches your chest rise and fall, watches the way words come and go on your closed lips.
he thinks about kissing you, pulling you into his arms. basking in the bright, warm glow of something his filthy, bloody hands certainly don't deserve.
(he'd plant you your own field of them, if only to see you smile like that for him again.)
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“i grew one centimeter.”
you look up, deadpan. rin is standing there just past your bedroom door. he stands like a ghost, no greeting whatsoever, just straight to the point. as blunt as his brother’s bangs.
“nice to see you too, rin. hello. yes, i missed you too. i haven’t seen or heard from you for fourteen days. i thought ego sent you off to war. i already got my stationery prepared, i was about to write you a letter confessing—”
“i grew. one centimeter.”
he says it again, like repetition will make it more meaningful. like the metric system is the most important thing in the world right now. he’s still by the door, arms by his side, shoulders stiff, and his bag hanging on his back. you don’t know whether he’s proud or just incredibly weird about measurements.
“as i was saying,” you continue, undeterred, “if you didn’t tell me beforehand that ego sent you guys training, i would’ve thought he killed you off for some petty reason. but then i thought, no, ego isn’t that bad. he’s actually a really good mentor. so you getting killed off was out.”
“i said i grew a centimeter.”
you finally lower your phone, staring at him like your brain has frozen halfway through processing. there’s a beat of silence. one. two. maybe three. hell, might as well take five.
“…okay,” you say slowly. “what do you want me to do about it?”
he meets your gaze without blinking. not a hint of irony. voice low and flat and utterly serious.
“praise me.”
you just stare.
nothing comes out of your mouth. you physically cannot form a response because what the hell did he just say to you. you refuse to believe this is happening. what the hell happened? where the hell did ego send him?
your eyes narrow in pure disbelief. like you’ve accidentally walked into the wrong conversation. like you’re still waiting for the punchline and realizing, with growing horror, that there isn’t one.
“praise you?”
“i worked hard,” he says, cutting you off like that explains everything.
“... for growing?”
“sleep schedule, posture work, morning trainings, meditating, yoga.” he says it with that same mechanical efficiency he uses when analyzing plays on the pitch. “ measurable progress.”
you just keep looking at him.
he looks back, completely unfazed.
he’s serious. itoshi rin is dead serious.
this man walked straight to your apartment as soon as training ended just to tell you that he grew a single centimeter and expects verbal validation for it.
“you’re unbelievable,” you mutter.
but your body betrays you—because even though your face is blank and your tone is flat, you reach up a hand and let him bend down and touch his head to your palm. you press your palm to the top of his head like you’re measuring it yourself.
okay, maybe he does feel the tiniest bit taller.
you drop your hand and sigh in defeat. as always you can never say no to him. curse you and your soft spot for one itoshi rin.
“congratulations on your one centimeter progress. growth arc of the century. it’s very impressive and inspiring.”
and like that, rin just plops onto you.
literally. like gravity ceased to exist for a moment and he decided your body was the most suitable mattress in the world. you grunt under his weight, your back hitting the couch cushions as he crashes on top of you like a human plank. his duffel bag falls to the floor with a thud, completely ignored.
“rin—”
he doesn’t say anything.
doesn’t have to.
his arms slide around your waist with zero subtlety, his face burying into your shoulder like it’s instinct. you’re still half-frozen from the whiplash of the past five minutes. your brain hasn’t even recovered from the praise me incident, and now he’s lying on you like he lives here (he does.)
you feel him breathe out. slow, deep, and heavy. the kind of breath someone takes when they’re finally safe. when they’re home.
and then—he bites you. not hard. just enough to feel his teeth graze your shoulder. no warning, no reason. like a cat acting out affection.
“did you just bite me?”
he hums. that’s a yes. completely unapologetic.
you tilt your head, staring at the ceiling like it might offer you clarity. it doesn’t. “you’re insane.”
“missed you.” rin says it so quietly. mumbled into you skin like he’s etching his word in your being and it makes your heart do its stupid backflips.
he presses closer, like he can’t get enough. like fourteen days was fourteen lifetimes.
and just when you think he’s settled, he mumbles again:
“…still want that praise.”
you close your eyes. not in annoyance, but because itoshi rin is exhausting (affectionately) and unfortunately, yours.

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~~Sae
I'm not a gooner artist guys, I just get... carried away when drawing, enjoy.
(COMMISSION ME PLEASE)
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