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When yâall start writing those sinners fics, make sure yâall donât forget Bo Chowâs fine ass đââïž
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MĆRI BaienïŒæŻć©æą ć Japanese 1798-1851ïŒ
from æą ćèæšè±èć€äčéš Â Â via   more
Yan! SatoSugu x Reader Sum: You've had the chances, why didn't you take them. In the end you'll always just lose the purest of love. Last part of: Can my friend join?, This is Love, Right? ** Can be read as standalone fics** TW: Yandere Behaviors (Obsession, Manipulation, etc), Death of Child Character, Blood, Toxic Relationship Dynamics, Depression, Dubcon, Lactation, Pregnancy themes, SatoSugu, Angst No Comfort. MDNI WC: 7.7k
A/n: I got supperrr stuck in the loop of editing, so I am just gonna post it, I feel like rereading it after the tenth time. I almost just pressed delete lol. :) enjoy!
Itâs all your fault, isnât it?
You did this to yourself. You should have walked away when the chance was there, when the door was still open, even just a crack. You should have screamed, fought, runâanything to reclaim a sliver of your freedom.
But you didnât.
You stayed.
Was it the security? The comfort of knowing youâd never struggle to pay bills or scramble to find work? Was it the way Satoru promised, over and over, that youâd never go unloved, never feel the ache of loneliness again?
Or was it something darker? Something you couldnât quite admit to yourself?
You told yourself it was love. You told yourself you were lucky. How many women could say they had someone whoâd give them the world? Someone who, with a flick of his wrist, could bend the rules of life itself to ensure you had everything you could ever need?
So, you stayed.
Even before Suguru became part of the equation, you stayed. You even stayed when Satoru would come home in the dead of night, his footsteps a faint echo through the silent halls before his hands found you. Youâd stir from your sleep as he pulled your panties down with barely a word, his breath hot against your neck.
There was no tenderness in those moments, no loveâjust need. A raw, consuming need he claimed you had to fulfill. And you let him, didnât you? You let him push inside you with barely any preparation, your body yielding to him because he knew it so well.
Satoru knew the places that made you crumble, the spots where your body quivered, the way your breath hitched when his fingers grazed just right. He knew you better than you knew yourself, didnât he? His movements were deliberate, practiced, the wet noises filling the room a cruel testament to how thoroughly heâd mastered you.
Youâd given him permission. He reminded you of that often, didnât he? That youâd said yes. That he worked so hard, carried so much, and that this was his right. That he had needs only you could meet.
And you understood. You always understood.
After all, he was the strongest, wasnât he?
So, you let him use you.
Like a doll.
Youâd lay there, staring at the ceiling, as he buried himself to the hilt one last time, his loud groans of release cutting through the stillness. A pathetic little whimper followed, muffled by the darkness, as he spilled himself inside you. And then, as if the act meant nothing, he pressed a sweet kiss to your temple, murmured something soft and indistinct, and rolled over to his side of the bed.
You stayed there, silent and unmoving, the lingering heat of his body beside you doing nothing to warm the cold ache between your thighs.
Thatâs when the thought would creep in. A sick, unwelcome whisper:
You didnât even climax.
You hated yourself for thinking it. For letting it matter.
But still, you stayed.
Was it fear that held you there? Or was it hopeâa desperate, foolish hope that one-day things would change? That one day, every day would feel like those rare, sweet moments when he pressed teasing kisses against your lips before dragging you out to get sweets. That heâd touch you with love, with the tenderness he so effortlessly showed to othersâwhen he wasnât breaking them apart piece by piece with that same teasing grin.
And now, looking back, you canât decide whatâs worse: that you didnât leave when you had the chanceâŠ
Or that part of you still doesnât want to.
You stayed, even when the small arguments started. The little spats about wanting him to open up more, to share pieces of his life with you, the pieces he always kept hidden. Perhaps it was selfishâmaybe even naĂŻveâbut you wanted to know why he loved you.
Really, truly loved you.
But you never asked.
You saved that question, tucking it away deep into your heart, right alongside the cracks that had already started forming. You told yourself it wasnât the right time. That maybe he wasnât ready. That you shouldnât push. Instead, you focused on the good times, clinging to them like lifelines.
Because they were good, werenât they?
What other guy would give you the world like Satoru did? What other guy would bring you flowers every weekâa different color each time, sometimes traditional, sometimes exotic, but always beautiful? What other guy would shower you with affection so openly, so shamelessly, pressing kisses to your skin, nuzzling into the crook of your neck as though you were the only thing keeping him grounded?
Satoru had told you he loved you. And maybe he didâin a way that wasnât entirely built on desire, the need to keep you within his grasp, or the insatiable craving to hold you close for the rest of your days.
Thatâs what you told yourself, anyway.
Thatâs why you stayed.
Even when Suguru came into the pictureâwhen those dark, calculating eyes lingered on you just a moment too long when his quiet, honeyed words wove themselves into your life like threads binding you to a tapestry you couldnât escapeâyou stayed.
You had the choice, didnât you? You could have said no. You could have walked away.
But you didnât.
You stayed, and now there was no one else to blame.
So, truly, it is all your fault.
However, your heartâs at fault too, isnât it? For leaning into Suguru's touches, craving his warmth, even when you knew deep down that he was a cruel and awful man. A man who veiled his darkness in sweetness, wrapping it in gentle words and tender caresses that made you doubt your own truths. He was a master of contradictionâsoft hands and sharp edges, honeyed lies hiding an iron grip.
You could have left.
You could have said no to the whole relationship, shut the door before it ever opened.
But you didnât.
You stayed.
You told yourself that maybe this was the best you could hope for, the best kind of love someone like you deserved. Because it was love, wasnât it? They loved you. Even if it was conditional. Even if you had to give and give, piece after piece of yourself, just to receive a sliver in return.
Love comes in many forms, after all. And this was love.
Or so you continued to convince yourself.
This is what you deserve. That you should have listened to your gut, back when every touch felt too heavy, too lingering, too much. Back when their words seemed to wrap around you like chains instead of promises. You should have left before the walls around you closed in. Before you realized that leaving wasnât just difficultâit was dangerous.
You had your chances, didnât you? If only youâd taken them.
You knew Satoru would tear the world apart to find you if you ran. Heâd find you, no matter where you went, no matter how far. But⊠would he really?
If youâd left early enough, maybe it wouldnât have been like this. Maybe it would have been nothing more than a bad breakup, a lesson in heartbreak youâd recover from in time. Maybe, if youâd left after Suguruâs return, Satoru would have leaned on him instead of spiraling further into obsession.
But you didnât leave.
You stayed.
Such a stupid, stupid girl.
And yetâŠ
It was never just about them, was it?
Because you craved love too, just as much as they did. You wanted it desperatelyâso much that you ignored the warnings in your heart, the creeping dread in your chest. You wanted to be loved, to feel wanted, to belong to someone in a way that was absolute, undeniable, and unshakable.
And thatâs exactly what they gave you.
But love like thatâit came with a cost.
And you paid for it in silence, in submission, in the pieces of yourself youâd never get back.
So now, here you are, locked away in the beautiful Gojo estate. A place so grand it should feel like a palace, yet it suffocates you like a gilded cage. Every corner gleams with wealth and power, every surface reflects the life youâre supposed to be grateful for.
The maids donât meet your eyes.
To them, you arenât Satoruâs wife. You arenât a partner. Youâre something lesser.
A pet.
Because you arenât the one ensuring the estate runs smoothly while Satoru is away on his endless missions. That responsibility doesnât fall to youâit belongs to Suguru, doesnât it? Heâs the one in charge. He holds the reins, commanding the household with a quiet authority that leaves no room for question.
And you?
You remain.
The pet. The wife. The child-bearer.
Barefoot and pregnant, with a swollen belly to show for it, you shuffle through the estate like a ghost. Your body aches, weighed down not just by the child growing inside you, but by the chains of a life you canât escape.
Suguru sees to it that the estate runs like a well-oiled machine, all while maintaining his title as the second strongest. His responsibilities never seem to tire him, never seem to dull his devotion. If anything, they only make him more overbearing.
He adores pampering you.
He drapes you in the softest blankets, ensuring youâre always warm. He dresses you in the finest clothes, silks and satins that cling to your growing belly, showcasing the proof of your usefulness. He loves the way your independence has been stripped away, loves the way youâve been forced to rely on him for everything.
When did you become so dependent?
When did you start accepting his affection like a loyal dog, start leaning into the way his rough, calloused hands would trace the curve of your stomach? When did you start craving the way heâd gaze up at you with that lovesick smile, his voice low and honeyed as he murmured sweet words about the future?
âI hope the baby looks like Satoru,â heâd say, his eyes dark and soft as they met yours. Then, after a pause, âI hope itâs a girl.â
The words always made your chest tighten, made your stomach twist.
You know he must miss the twins.
Itâs not just the weight of their absenceâitâs the way heâs filled that void with this child, this unborn life. You can see it in the way he touches you, the way he watches you. Heâs more excited about this pregnancy than you are.
And thatâs the cruelest part, isnât it?
Because to him, this isnât just a child. Itâs a legacy. A purpose.
To you?
Itâs another chain.
And yet, you hate how loving he is. How heâs always there to hold your hair back when youâre bent over, heaving in the dead of night. How his large, warm hands find every knot in your aching limbs, massaging away the tension with a tenderness that makes your heartache.
Itâs cruel, how gentle he can be. How he disarms you with care just when you think you might muster the strength to fight back.
Thereâs a constant mantra in your mind, a desperate hope that the baby wonât resemble either of them.
Because the thought of seeing their features reflected back at you stirs a fear too heavy to bear.
The thought of seeing their features reflected in those tiny, innocent eyes is terrifying. It brings the fear that every decision will feel like a mistake, that allowing any of this to happen will become an unbearable regret.
You tell yourself you hope, but itâs hard to ignore the possibility, isnât it?
What if the child inherits Satoruâs piercing blue eyesâso crystalline they seem otherworldly, glowing even in the faintest light? The same eyes that burn and freeze you all at once, stripping you bare and exposing every secret, every hidden part of you.
Even his grinâboyish, sharp, too wideâlingers in your mind. A grin that could charm and cut in the same breath, leaving you unsure whether to lean closer or step away. What if that grin appeared on a smaller, softer face, just as devastating?
Or worseâwhat if the baby inherits Suguruâs gaze?
Those dark, soulful eyes that pull you in like the tide, gentle at first glance, inviting even, but hiding endless, churning storms beneath their surface. Eyes that promise escape is not an option. Unlike Satoruâs, Suguruâs smiles are quieter, softerâbut no less dangerous. His smiles feel deliberate, like theyâre slipping past every defense you didnât even know you had.
Would the baby inherit Satoruâs arrogance? Suguruâs patience?
Or worseâwould the child inherit both of their possessiveness?
The thought makes your skin crawl.
But the fear doesnât end there.
Because itâs not just about the baby, is it?
Itâs about you.
About how theyâve already carved themselves so deeply into your soul that you canât even imagine a world without them. You hate that truth. Hate the way it festers inside you, a bitter root growing into every part of you.
You hate Satoruâs smirk when he strides into the estate after a mission, brushing off the exhaustion and blood as if itâs nothing. How he towers over you, his white hair catching the light in a way that seems almost ethereal, his fingers tilting your chin up with a mock tenderness that makes your breath catch.
You hate how he always knows exactly what to say to make you crumble, his voice dipping into that teasing lilt that makes your heart flutter in spite of yourself.
And Suguruâoh, you hate how he lingers. How his touch lingers. His hands are always warm, always deliberate, tracing paths across your skin as if heâs claiming you, piece by piece. Every stroke of his fingers feels like a silent reminder that you are his, that you belong to him. His voice, low and soothing, is a cruel contradictionâa balm against your nerves, even when his words are laced with quiet threats you pretend not to hear.
You hate them.
You hate the way they consume you, the way theyâve woven themselves into the fabric of your life so tightly that even your thoughts feel tangled in their presence.
And yet, as you sit in the vast, lonely expanse of the Gojo estate, the weight of your belly grounding you, you know the truth.
Youâre not just afraid of the baby looking like them.
Youâre afraid of what that child will mean.
Because if they look like Satoru, with his arrogance, his fire, his brilliance, how will you deny the pride swelling in your chest? How will you stop yourself from feeling that flicker of awe, even when you know you shouldnât?
And if they look like Suguru, with his quiet strength, his steadfast devotion, how will you deny the love? How will you stop yourself from melting beneath those familiar eyes, from imagining them crinkling with joy or softening with affection?
You canât.
And that's horrifying.
You wonât be able to ignore how Satoru has changed, how heâs become softer, more attentive in ways that make it harder to hold onto your resentment. How he lingers closer to you than he ever did before, as if the mere distance between you might undo something fragile inside him.
How heâs started resting his head in your lap as you sit together in the serene gardens, his white hair catching the sunlight like spun silk, almost ethereal. His long lashes cast soft shadows over his cheeks as his half-lidded gaze flickers up to meet yours, brimming with a tenderness you donât know how to process.
He murmurs lazy words of affection, his voice low and warm, the kind of sweetness that drips like honey and sticks to your skin. His fingers trace absentminded circles on your thighs, soft patterns that feel far too intimate, far too easy.
And you hate how much you crave it.
You hate the way his presence soothes something raw inside you, even when you tell yourself it shouldnât.
You hate how heâs begun helping you with the small, intimate things you wish you could keep to yourself. Like the unbearable ache in your swollen breasts, the pressure building so much it leaves you trembling, whimpering in pain. How he doesnât hesitate, doesnât even ask.
The way Satoru's lips wrap around you with loud, deliberate suckles, the sound echoing in the quiet as he eases the pressure with almost clinical precision. He doesnât flinch. He doesnât falter. His hands grip your hips to steady you, his thumbs pressing reassuring circles into your skin.
You hate the sound.
You hate the warmth of his breath against your skin, the way it prickles, a constant reminder of just how close he always isâtoo close.
When heâs finished, he pulls back with a satisfied hum, his lips brushing against your collarbone with a lingering kiss. His voice low, almost tender, as he murmurs, âI love this version of you.â
The words settle into you like stones. His lips, still soft from the milk, press against yours, and the faint sweetness lingers, almost cloying. Satoru murmurs more wordsâgentle, saccharine things that would feel kind if not for the way his hands start to roam as they wrap around your waist.
âHow nurturing youâve become,â he whispers, his tone carrying a dangerous sort of reverence.
Thatâs what he loves. Thatâs what he says.
And the way he looks at you when he says itâthose bright blue eyes glinting with something dark, something that sinks its claws into youâmakes your skin crawl. Because you know exactly what he means.
He doesnât love the nurturing in and of itself. He loves how it ties you to him. How it binds you to this role, this life, this carefully constructed world where you are his and only his.
The version of you he loves is one that has no room for defiance, no space for resistanceâonly the space to give, to sacrifice, to bend under the weight of his love.
And thatâs what makes it so much worse.
Because even as you hate it, even as your stomach churns and your skin prickles, thereâs a part of you that leans into his touch. A part of you that longs for the softness, for the fleeting moments when it feels like love instead of control.
And you hate yourself for that, too
Because you know how it goes. Youâve seen it now. Lived it.
How one pregnancy ends and another begins.
The cycle repeated itself after your firstborn, didnât it? Barely a year after you gave birth, they had you pregnant again. You didnât even have time to recover, to heal, before they decided it was time for another.
But they love you, donât they?
Satoruâs affection is impossible to missâthe way he grins at you, almost childlike, as he cups your face with hands that can destroy worlds but hold you as though youâre the most delicate thing heâs ever touched. How he showers you with gifts, flowers in every shade imaginable, rare treasures that sparkle as brightly as his endless energy.
How many times has he told you, in his low, teasing voice, âYouâre my world, you know that? I could do anything, have anythingâbut none of it would matter without you.â
It sounds like love, doesnât it?
And SuguruâSuguru loves you too, in his quiet, steady way. You see it in the way he watches you, his dark eyes softening when you enter the room, the weight of his gaze feels suffocating. Heâs the one who stays calm when you cry, wrapping his arms around you and murmuring, âShh, itâs okay. Iâm here. You donât have to carry this alone.â
And you believe him, donât you?
They love you. Thatâs why they insist on keeping you close. Why Satoru kisses your forehead every morning, why Suguru runs his fingers through your hair as he whispers sweet nothings youâre too exhausted to resist. Thatâs why they ensure youâre taken care of, why they never let you lift a finger, why they promise theyâll always protect you.
âYou donât have to do anything,â Satoru once said, kissing your swollen belly as he grinned up at you. âJust stay here with us. Thatâs all we need.â
âItâs not just for us,â Suguru added, his voice softer, more measured. âItâs for you too. We want you to feel safe. Loved.â
And in moments like that, when the weight of their words settles in your chest like a lullaby, you almost believe them.
You tell yourself that no one else would love you this much. No one else would care for you so completely, so unconditionallyâbecause this is love, isnât it?
The maids barely acknowledged your struggles. Their gazes were cold, dismissive, even as your body ached and your mind screamed for reprieve. They would gently pry your child from your arms with hushed whispers.
âYou need more rest,â theyâd say, their voices soft but unyielding. âWeâll take care of them. Donât worry.â
And what could you do? Youâd watch helplessly as they carried your baby away, leaving you empty-handed, empty-hearted. As if you were nothing more than a vessel, an incubator meant to bear and birth heirs for the Gojo family.
Your firstborn was a boy.
A son.
An heir.
He looked just like Satoru.
Those piercing blue eyes stared back at you from his tiny, cherubic face, wide and curious, already holding a glint of brilliance and confidence you couldnât deny. His hair was the same stark white, impossibly soft beneath your trembling fingers as you brushed it back, memorizing every perfect strand. Even the little smirk he gave in his sleep mirrored Satoruâsâa playful, almost mocking curl at the corners of his mouth that made your heart ache with emotions you couldnât unravel.
You loved him.
You hated that you loved him.
And when Suguru would cradle him in his arms, his dark eyes soft and filled with a devotion that seemed to crack the carefully constructed walls around your heart, you couldnât deny the warmth blooming in your chest. Heâd whisper promises to the childâvows of protection and guidance.
When Satoru would swoop in, effortlessly spinning the boy around with an energy that filled the room with light, the sound of your sonâs uncontrollable laughter echoing like music, that warmth would return. It would swell in your chest, suffocating and undeniable, a cruel reminder of the chains you wore willingly and unwillingly all at once.
This is what they wanted, wasnât it?
This is what theyâd planned all along.
And now, with another child growing inside you, you realize something that terrifies you more than anything else.
Youâre not sure if you stayed because you had no choice.
Or because you wanted to.
Again, itâs all your fault.
For trying to run, again.
For thinking, just for a moment, that you could escape them.
You were far too pregnant. Belly too far swollen, body heavy and slow, every step a reminder of how deeply tethered you were to this vast estate. But the thought wouldnât leave your mind. The desperate hope of freedom burned too brightly, too wildly, even as your body betrayed you.
Even as you were dragged back to that sickening place, back to the people that you convinced yourselfâdesperately, foolishlyâthat this was love.
Youâd screamed at Suguru, the words spilling out like a torrent you couldnât stop. You told him the child was yours too, that you had the right to hold them, to sleep in the same room, to be more than a vessel. Your voice cracked, raw with frustration and desperation, as you hurled your defiance at him.
You remember the way his gaze darkened.
He didnât yell. He didnât snap. That wasnât Suguruâs way.
Instead, he stepped closer, his movements slow, calculated, as though he were approaching a frightened animal. He tilted his head, his expression calm, disarming, the warmth in his dark eyes a stark contrast to the undercurrent of control they held.
âYouâre upset,â he murmured, his voice soft, soothing. His hand reached out to cup your cheek, his thumb brushing away the tears streaking your face. âAnd thatâs okay. Youâve been through so much, havenât you?â
The quiet warmth in Suguru's voice made it hard to breathe, made the frustration clawing at your throat turn to something elseâsomething like shame.
âYou need to calm down,â he continued, a warm calloused hand slipping down to cradle the side of your neck, his thumb pressing lightly against your pulse. âI donât want you to hurt yourself. I donât want you to hurt us.â
His words lingered, heavy with meaning, as he pulled you closer, his forehead pressing against yours.
âI know itâs hard,â he whispered, his breath warm against your skin. âBut I love you. We love you. Everything we doâeverything I doâis for you.â
You wanted to push him away, to scream that it wasnât love, that this wasnât love. But as his arms wrapped around you, strong and unyielding, pulling you into his embrace as though Suguru could shield you from the very world they had trapped you in.
âYouâre everything to me,â he murmured, soft lips brushing your temple. âDonât you see that? You donât need to run. You donât need to be afraid. Iâll take care of you. Iâll always take care of you.â
A voice that was so tender, so achingly sincere, that it almost broke you. Suguru's words were enough to extinguish the fire of defiance burning in your chest, to leave you standing there, trembling and helpless in his arms.
The maids saw it, didnât they? They whispered about you, their quiet voices slipping through the halls like ghosts. They called you ungrateful. Sick. They said you didnât understand how fortunate you were.
âYou should be enjoying this,â they murmured, their words laced with thinly veiled judgment. âNo responsibilities, no struggles. A carefree life. Everything is taken care of for you. What more could you want?â
What more could you want?
No choices.
Thatâs what they meant, wasnât it? No choices. No freedom. No you.
Was something wrong with you? Maybe.
Maybe there was something wrong with wanting more. For wanting to feel like a person again, instead of a vessel, a doll, a beautifully dressed incubator meant to carry their legacy.
It really is all your fault, isnât it?
Because when labor came, it dragged you into hell.
Thirty-three grueling hours. Each contraction ripped through your body like a punishment, an unrelenting reminder of every fleeting thought of rebellion, of every moment you dared to imagine a life beyond them.
The emergency c-section was chaosâa flurry of hands, sterile lights, and voices rising above the incessant ringing in your ears. You were losing too much blood. Fever scorched your skin, your body trembling as the edges of the world blurred, your thoughts slipping between consciousness and darkness.
You couldnât make sense of what was happening. You werenât even sure whose tears streaked your skin as they fellâwere they yours? Satoruâs? Suguruâs?
You didnât know.
You didnât know what happened after that.
All you remember are the words.
Suguruâs voice, low and steady, cutting through the haze. He leaned close, his hand resting on your clammy cheek with an almost painful tenderness. His dark eyes bore into yours, soft yet heavy with something that made your stomach twist.
âYou shouldnât have run,â he whispered. His tone was calm, soothing even, but the edge beneath it was sharp enough to draw blood. âLook at what youâve done to yourself. You shouldâve listened.â
And for a long time, you didnât have the strength to argue.
The days that followed blurred together. Feeling like a ghost in your body, too weak to move, too tired to speak. Satoru and Suguru hovered, their gazes flickering between concern and something you couldn't quite place. The maids continued to whisper on with their rumors, their eyes darting to you with pity or disdain, as though youâd done this to yourself.
In their eyes, you were lucky.
Lucky to have survived. Lucky to have them.
And lucky, in their eyes, to not have another pregnancy until your first two boys turned five.
Five years of peace. Or something that resembled it.
Five years of watching your sons grow, of hearing their first words, of feeling their small, warm arms wrap around you as they giggled into into your neck. Five years where it was almost believable that this was normal, where you could almost convince yourself this was love.
Because it did feel like love, didnât it?
Until the day you overheard Suguru speaking to them.
His voice was hushed, but not hushed enough.
âMommy is sick,â he said, tone calm and soothing like he was explaining a simple fact of life. âSometimes she says things she doesnât mean. Sometimes she gets confused. But thatâs okay. We love her, donât we?â
A pang sent through your chest, breath catching as you froze in the hallway. Those cruel words lies carved like knives, each one slicing deeper than the last.
He was planting seeds, wasnât he?
Teaching them to see you the way he wanted them to see you. Fragile. Dependent. Broken.
However with fists clenched, nails pressing into palms with a sting sharp enough to ground the swirling emotions within. The urge to scream hovered at the edge, to cry and storm into the room, demanding explanations with the desperation of a cornered animal. Words burned on the tip of the tongueâprotests that it wasnât true, that sickness and confusion werenât the chains binding this existence.
But what would they believe?
Suguruâs steady, patient voice, rich and even, always laced with quiet authority? The father whose dark eyes always seemed to understand everything, who carried himself with calm, unshakable control, even when his smiles didnât quite reach his eyes?
Or you?
The mother who had tried to run, who had collapsed and bled and screamed, who had been scolded for her defiance. The one they saw as weak, frail, and ungrateful.
You wanted to run again. The thought burned in the back of your mind, relentless and wild.
But you didnât.
You stayed.
Because, in the end, what choice did you really have?
But by the time your third childâa sweet boy who looked like a perfect blend of you and Suguruâturned three, the illusion of peace began to crack.
Suguru was already leaning close, his voice soft and coaxing as he murmured into your ear, âI think itâs time we try for a girl.â
Satoru, of course, was on board almost immediately.
After all, your third child was different. A nonsorcerer, just like you, showing none of the abilities your first two boys possessed. Those two had cried in the dead of night, their small voices trembling with fear as they described the horrors only they could seeâthings you couldnât even begin to comprehend.
But that wasnât why your husbands looked at Kiyoshi with quiet disapproval.
It wasnât his lack of cursed energy that made them see him as an anomaly.
It was his heart.
From the moment Kiyoshi was placed in your arms, red-faced and wailing, he clung to you with a desperation that never faded. He didnât want the maids to hold him, didnât toddle after Suguruâs composed steps or reached for Satoruâs strong arms. He wanted you. Always you.
He was a mamaâs boy through and through, and that was love.
A love so pure it felt like a lifeline in the suffocating world youâd been forced into.
While you loved your first two boys deeplyâhow could you not?âthere was always a distance there, a reflection of the walls your husbands had built around you. The first two cuddled into your lap, their small hands clutching yours as they whispered things that broke you.
âMommy, we want you to get better.â âWe donât like it when you yell at Daddy to let you leave.â
They were too young to understand, too innocent to see the chains tightening around you.
But Kiyoshi understood, in his own way. Even as a toddler, he refused to leave your side, refused to let the maids or his fathers pull him from your arms. He was always on your hip, his little hand clutching your clothes, his head resting against your chest.
âKiyoshi,â Satoru had said once, his tone laced with false amusement, âmeans âpure sadness.â Donât you think thatâs fitting?â
He smiled as if it were a joke, but you could hear the bitterness beneath it.
And maybe it was fitting.
Because Kiyoshi only stopped wailing when he was in your arms, as if he already knew the world outside of you was too cruel, too cold.
By the time he turned three, Kiyoshi would toddle after you in the gardens, small, sturdy legs working hard to keep up. His faceâa blend of Suguruâs gentleness and your warmthâwould brighten with the purest smile. When his eyes crinkled at the corners, just like yours, you couldnât help but feel your heart swell.
âLook, Mommy!â heâd say, holding up a flower heâd plucked from the garden, his tiny fingers dirt-stained and clumsy. âFor you!â
Youâd crouch down, brushing his dark hair back as you took the flower, your voice soft and tender in a way you hadnât heard in years.
âThank you, my sweet boy.â
And for a moment, it felt like it was just the two of you.
Like you could breathe again.
But you knew better.
As the sound of approaching footsteps always shattered moments like these. Heavy and far too familiar. You didnât need to turn around to know it was Suguru.
His softspoken voice broke the fragile silence, calm and even, as always. âKiyoshi,â he said, warm and affectionate, though laced with something you couldnât quite name. âYouâve been keeping your mother all to yourself again, havenât you?â
Kiyoshi stiffened at your side, the little hand tightening its grip on your kimono as he glanced nervously toward Suguru.
Suguru stepped closer and crouched down to Kiyoshiâs level, dark eyes softening as they met his sonâs. âCome here, son,â he murmured, holding out a hand. His tone was gentle, coaxing, but there was an unspoken expectation beneath it. âLet Daddy hold you for a little while. Iâve missed you.â
But Kiyoshi didnât move. His small fingers curled tighter into the fabric of your kimono, his face pressing into your side as though trying to make himself small, invisible.
Suguruâs gaze flicked to you, lips curling into a faint smile that didnât quite reach his eyes. âSo shy,â he said softly, his voice carrying a note of amused affection. âBut you donât have to be, Kiyoshi. Daddy just wants to hold you. You know that, donât you?â
You felt your heart clench, torn between the instinct to shield him and the weight of Suguruâs presence. The tenderness in his tone, in the way his hand remained outstretched, made it all the harder to breathe.
âKiyoshi,â Suguru said again, his voice dipping into a firmer edge, calm but unyielding. âCome.â
Reluctantly, your little boy let go of you, his steps slow and hesitant as he moved toward his father. Suguruâs smile widened, soft and reassuring, as he scooped Kiyoshi up effortlessly, cradling him with a gentleness that felt too deliberate, too controlled.
âThereâs my good boy,â he murmured, brushing Kiyoshiâs hair back with careful fingers. His touch lingered, as though committing the texture to memory. âYou love your mommy very much, donât you?â
Kiyoshi nodded silently, his small face burying itself in Suguruâs shoulder.
Suguruâs gaze lifted to meet yours, a gentle smile, his tone almost playful. âYouâve spoiled him,â he said, a note of amusement threading through his words. âHeâs too attached.â
You opened your mouth to respond, to say something, but the words caught in your throat.
What could you say?
That you were the only warmth in a world that terrified him? That his attachment wasnât a flaw, but a desperate grasp at something safe?
Satoru appeared not long after, his presence impossible to ignore as he strolled into the garden, hands in his pockets and a grin that seemed too bright for the moment. His eyes, however, betrayed something softerâsomething that lingered only when they landed on you.
âKiyoshi giving you trouble again?â Satoru's voice came out light, tinged with curiosity.
âNo trouble,â Suguru replied smoothly, a hand still resting on Kiyoshiâs small back. âJust a little too fond of his mother.â
Satoru chuckled, shaking his head as he moved closer. His cerulean gaze flicked briefly to Kiyoshi before returning to you, that playful grin softening as he moved to brush a kiss against your temple. âWell, can you blame him?â he murmured, his voice low, meant only for you. âYouâre hard not to love.â
The warmth of his affection made your heart twist, and your stomach flutter. For a moment, it was easy to forget the way his words often carried double meanings, easy to believe he was simply being sweet.
He straightened, turning his attention back to Suguru with a teasing smile. âBut weâll fix that soon enough, wonât we?â
They didnât mean to hurt him, you told yourself. They wouldnât.
But you knew better.
Because Kiyoshi was different. He didnât fit into their world the way your first two boys did. And in their eyes, difference was something to be controlled.
For now, they let him cling to you. They let him toddle after you in the garden, offering flowers and dirt-streaked smiles that made your heart ache with both love and dread. For now, they allowed him to stay close, to hold onto the warmth you gave him, to believe he was safe in your arms.
But you knew it was only a matter of time.
Because your sons didnât belong to you. Not really. They never had.
And no matter how much you wanted to shield Kiyoshi, no matter how fiercely you loved him, you knew one simple, devastating truth:
Theyâd let you have this for now.
But they would take him, too.
Because, after all, itâs all your fault.
For fleeing in the middle of the night.
The day was supposed to be perfectâa rare moment where Satoru and Suguru had taken the older two boys to the school, their voices filled with excitement as they promised to teach them more about the world they were destined to inherit. Your sweet boys kissed you goodbye with a tenderness that felt almost cruel, leaving you behind with Kiyoshi in the quiet, sprawling estate.
You had been on your best behavior. Smiling more, laughing when Satoru teased you, letting Suguru hold you a little longer than usual. Youâd made them believe you were finally settling, finally accepting your role in their carefully constructed world.
And it worked.
So when the sun set and the house fell silent, you made your move.
You bundled Kiyoshi up in the softest blanket you could find, the small body warm and sleepy against your chest. He stirred only slightly as you slipped out of the estate, his tiny hands clutching onto your clothes.
He didnât cry.
He didnât make a sound.
It was as if he understood. As if even at three years old, he knew that silence was the only thing keeping you safe.
He nuzzled his face into the crook of your neck, his soft breaths warm against your skin, and you couldnât help the tears that welled up in your eyes.
The highway stretched out before you, an endless black ribbon under the faint glow of the moon. The lights of the city sparkled in the distance, a beacon of hope, a promise of sanctuary.
You walked for miles, the cold night air biting at your skin, legs aching with every step. But you didnât stop. You couldnât. Not with the faint echoes of paranoia whispering at the back of your mind.
Were they already looking for you? Did Satoru sense you slipping away even from miles away? Did Suguru wake in the middle of the night with the suffocating weight of intuition, already calling for their forces to track you down?
You didnât know.
And you didnât care.
The city limits were closer now, the glow of neon lights growing brighter, sharper. The faint hum of life and sound buzzed in the distance.
Kiyoshi stirred in your arms, his little head lifting just enough to peek out at the world around him. His dark eyes, so much like Suguruâs but filled with an innocence his father could no longer claim, glanced up at you with quiet curiosity.
âMommy,â he whispered, his voice barely audible over the soft hum of the wind.
You pressed a kiss to his forehead, your tears wetting his soft hair. âWeâre almost there, my sweet boy,â you murmured, your voice trembling under the weight of hope and fear. âJust a little farther.â
Sanctuary was so close you could taste it.
But itâs all your fault, isnât it?
Born a nonsorcerer.
Blind to the horrors that lurk unseen. Powerless to fight them off. Too weak to keep that sweet little boy safe.
You always imagined curses as massive, grotesque creaturesâmonsters so obvious that the very air would change in their presence. That the world would stop, that everything would smell of death and decay as they loomed closer.
But when a curse appears, nothing changes.
Thereâs no warning. No shift in the wind.
The only thing you feel is the sudden weight of your child going limp in your arms.
And then the blood.
And then the blood.
It coats the groundâdark and endless, pooling around your knees and seeping into the cracks of the earth. Sticky and warm, it clings to trembling hands, staining your kimono, your skin, your very soul.
You canât move. Canât breathe.
Your little boyâyour Kiyoshiâlies limp in your arms, his small body growing colder with every agonizing second. Tiny fingers, once so eager to cling to you, now dangle lifelessly. His dark lashes rest softly against pale cheeks, unmoving.
He looks like heâs sleeping.
You tell yourself that, over and over, as if saying it enough times will somehow make it true. Shaking hands brush back his dark hair, trembling as you whisper his name. Softly at first, then louder, your voice splintering with every syllable.
âKiyoshi⊠wake up, baby. Please.â
But nothing changes.
The world around you feels wrongâtoo quiet, too still. The city lights in the distance mock you, their glow a cruel reminder of the sanctuary youâd been so close to reaching. Youâd promised him, hadnât you? Promised that everything would be okay. That youâd make it there. That youâd keep him safe.
You lied.
âKiyoshi,â you choke out again, pressing a desperate kiss to his cooling forehead. Hot tears streak down your face, wetting his soft hair as you clutch him tighter, as though you could anchor him to youâkeep him here, with you.
A wail tears through the night, raw and broken, shattering the oppressive silence. The sound is unrecognizable, guttural and full of despair. It takes a moment before you realize itâs coming from you.
The blood stains everythingâyour hands, your clothes, the groundâbut itâs the loss of his warmth that destroys you.
How did this happen?
Your mind races, replaying the moments in broken fragments. Youâd been walking, your legs aching, his small body cradled against your chest. Heâd been so quiet, so trusting, his head nuzzled into the crook of your neck.
You were almost there.
Then the air shiftedâjust slightlyâa subtle wrongness you hadnât noticed until it was too late.
You didnât see it.
You didnât even know it was there until his body jerked in your arms, a sharp, unnatural movement that stole his breathâand yours.
And then he went limp.
It doesnât make sense. None of it makes sense.
You rock him back and forth, tears falling freely, your voice hoarse as you beg him to wake up. Leaning to press your cheek against his, murmuring his name over and over, as if the sound alone could bring him back.
Because you failed him.
Because this is your fault.
Suguruâs arms wrap around you, their weight unbearable. His warmth presses against the chill of the night, suffocating in a way that makes the air harder to pull into your lungs. He cradles you like something precious, something fragileâlike he cares, even as his words twist the knife deeper into your chest.
âWeâll take care of this, just like always,â he says, his voice soft, almost gentle. His lips brush against your hair, lingering, and the tenderness in the gesture makes your skin crawl. âYou just need to stop fighting us. Donât make this harder than it needs to be.â
Satoru stood frozen, head bowed, white hair catching the faint glow of the city lights. Kiyoshiâs lifeless body was pressed tightly against him, his hands trembling ever so slightly as he held him close. For a moment, you thought you saw something crack in his expressionâsomething raw, something human.
But it was gone just as quickly as it appeared.
When he finally turned his gaze to you, his blue eyes were as hollow as youâd ever seen them. âYou shouldnât have done this,â he said quietly, his voice devoid of its usual teasing lilt. âWhy couldnât you just stay?â
The question stabbed deeper than you thought possible, the shame and guilt coursing through you like poison.
Why couldnât you just stay?
The image of Kiyoshiâs bright smile flashed, his tiny hands offering you flowers from the garden, his laugh ringing out like music in the suffocating silence of the estate. Heâd been your light, your tether to something good.
And now he was gone.
Because of you.
You sagged further into Suguruâs hold, the fight draining out of you entirely. The tears wouldnât stop, falling silently now, soaking into the front of Suguruâs shirt as he held you tighter.
âThere, there,â he murmured, his hand stroking your hair in slow, deliberate motions. âThatâs better. You donât have to fight anymore. Weâll make it right.â
But there was no right in this.
The car waited nearby, its door open like an unspoken command. Suguruâs grip on you didnât waver as he began guiding you toward it, his movements gentle but unrelenting. Satoru followed behind, cradling Kiyoshiâs small form like he was made of glass.
Your legs moved on instinct, numb and heavy, the metallic scent of blood lingering in the air.
The city lights grew fainter as the car doors shut behind you, locking you away from the world youâd been so close to reaching.
You told yourself youâd tried. That youâd done everything you could.
But deep down, you knew.
Youâd never escape them.
And as Suguruâs fingers intertwined with yours, as Satoruâs empty gaze lingered on the horizon, you realized something that hollowed you out completely.
It wasnât just that you had nothing left.
It was that you no longer cared to try.
It really was all your fault.
đđđ
Only a human can destroy a monster. Only a human could dare hope to.
mermaid.water on ig
memeboard đ”
ౚৠsatoru hates the idea of cock-warming. he thinks it's pointless, getting the opportunity to be in you, and not even bothering to make the most of it.
his idea of making the most, well, it would consist only of fucking you so hard, you won't be able to move the next day. that's what good boyfriends do, right?
"good boyfriends do whatever their girlfriend asks them to do," you counter.
satoru whines in response, looking up at you. all pretty, you're seated in his lap, as he lays on the bed. strands of white hair fall into his eyes, and you brush them away.
he pouts, "i am a good boyfriend." satoru's getting impatient, wanting to just feel your snug cunt around him. his throbbing cock sits hard on his stomach, red-tipped and leaky.
"then, please?" drawing out the syllables, you give him the best you can: puppy eyes. he caves. instantly.
grumbling, "fine. i guess you can put her in you. willingly choose not to move, too, or whatever."
you clap your hands, emerging victorious. you're not willing to test your luck, though, not commenting on the fact that you've told him multiple times not to refer to his penis with she/her pronouns.
he groans as you sink onto him, his thick length pushing past your spongey walls. there's a filthy squelching that fills the room, paired with your quiet whimpers.
satoru's hands grip your hips, fingers digging into the flesh. "shit, pretty girl, tight 'n' wet f'me. taking me s'good." his words slur into one another, lost in the depths of arousal.
there's always a certain amount of self-control it takes, to not immediately cum the second he's all the way in. "'toru," you murmur, accidentally clenching around him.
"fuck," he mutters, "you can't do that, squeeze your little pussy like that, if you aren't gonna do anything about it."
"sorry," you say, sheepish. his eyes flutter shut, a hum dismissing the apology.
"now, what? just... stay like that?" satoru tilts his head at you, questioningly. sassy, if you may add. he just really can't believe you'd rather be doing this.
shifting above him, you lean down, resting your head on his bare chest. "yeah. isn't it nice?"
his arms wrap come up, to wrap around your waist. there's a beat of silence from him. begrudgingly, your rigid boyfriend shrugs, "maybe."
you're too content to roll your eyes. he wouldn't admit it, but satoru was filled with love, in this moment. his shoulders relax, and his entire body seems to ease, a breath of satisfaction leaving him. he feels at peace. he's always at peace, when he's with you, but this is different.
more real. more raw.
it's incredibly intimate. he feels like he's a part of you, like there's nothing keeping you separated. satoru inhales your scent, holding you just a little tighter.
"baby, i love you," he whispers, voice thick with emotion.
you smile against him, "i love you, too, 'toru."
to say the least, cock-warming is his new favorite thing. there is no sitting beside him on the couch anymore, not when you're alone. no laying next to each other on bed, either.
if he was clingy before, he's a monster now. if you're near, he wants to be inside you. not to have sex, but just to rest. it's not like you're complaining, anyways. at the end of the day, you're down bad for him, just as much as he is for you.
A silly ask and I'm kinda surprised no one has done this yet and I like your writing so I'm sending it to you but basically fem reader and toji on an episode on maury :3
WHOâS YOUR DADDY? â toji fushiguro
pairing: toji fushiguro x fem!reader
a/n: the way this has sat in the drafts for well over a year, loved writing this btw, thanks anon!
itâs no secret that toji has his doubts about whether megumi is his.
but youâre officially over going back and forth with him. especially when he still owes you child support that he refuses to pay until you show him valid proof that megumi is his son.
and what better way to give him that confirmation that he desires than on the messiest show on daytime television, in front of a live studio audience.
âfor those who have joined us after the break, today we are joined by y/n, who claims that her ex boyfriend toji is pretending to act like he isnât the father to their two year old son megumi so he doesnât have to pay child support.â
the camera pans to you and toji sat a few feet away from each other. you can tell that he thinks this whole thing is a joke from the way heâs slouching in the chair and the constant sarcastic replies he gives maury each time heâs asked a simple question.
âmaury how do i know sheâs not tryna hustle me outta my hard earned money, huh?â he asks, seemingly thinking that heâs caught you in a tight spot. âbesides have you seen the kid? his hair is spiky as fuck, nobody in my family has that hair type.â
the laugh that threatens to leave your lips is almost sickening, using hair as reason to not claim his child was absurd.
it was almost as wild as trying to accuse you of being a good-for-nothing money hungry vulture. which was rich coming from him. considering that your job was practically funding his lifestyle, aside from the large dose of cash he received from his 'work tripsâ that cropped up once in a while.
the cash did nothing for you as he spent it as fast as he received it. rather than putting it towards megumiâs trust fund or college fund, he squandered it all on drinking and gambling, especially when it came to the races.
it turns out his charming looks and smiles do not work on the biggest gamble of all time: betting on damn race horses.
but in the rare instance he had some had some heart he contributed towards the bills and groceries. yet that still wasnât enough.
âwhen was the last time you paid for megumiâs diapers or his formula or anything related to the apartment, hm?â
you retort, revelling at how all the fight and bravado he once held was slowly seeping out of him, as if he had all of his blood sucked out of him. the host looks expectantly at toji, awaiting a response.
the audience sets off in a chorus of âboosâ before toji even has a chance to respond to clear his name. he feels ambushed, the humiliation of admitting to be a terrible father on television creeping up on him.
but what did he expect? he always pushed too hard and now heâs paying the price as you unsurprisingly pushed back even harder.
and of course in the sea of 'boos', thereâs a few cheers in the crowd from people who are more interested in getting into his pants instead of the main reason to why you were here in the first place.
âoh and maury if you think iâm lying, iâve got invoices, bank statements and receipts spanning the last three months.â you add âi can tell you for a fact that this man doesnât spend a dime on anythingâhe might as well put on a diaper and sleep in our son's crib.â
"and so what?" toji shrugs, ever so nonchalant. to the degree it pisses you off, he could at least try to act like he cares in front of the camera and the audience.
âi still make it up to you though, donât i?â he replies, a teasing edge to his tone that has implications that you donât want to unpack on national television, which was ironic since your business was already out there anyway.
the look on your face is almost murderous, and luckily maury manages to pick up on before this turns into a bloodbath. he quickly perks up as he holds up the manilla envelope that was going to make or break your day.
âIn here we have the results of the paternity test, come back after the break!â he says clasping his hand together as you head to the commercial break. immediately you head backstage, grabbing megumi from the staff member who seemed smitten with him.
he latched onto you as you doted on him, before he waddled off to play with his firetrucks that you brought with you in your bag. âheâs getting so big.â a familiar voice says and you turn to see him in the doorway.
âmegumi look! daddyâs come back with his tail between his legs because he knows heâs about to be publicly embarrassed on tv!â you say in a mocking voice, pointing out to where toji is standing and he toddles over, smacking his arm as he adorably glowers at his dad.
âbad daddy!â he says and you stop him before he gets out of control and starts to barrel toji with his kicking and slapping. you pull megumi onto your lap trying to calm him down whilst biting back a laugh.
âwe donât hit megumi, unless people deserve it like your daddy.â you tell him softly but you doubt heâs retained any of what you said anyway.
megumi is nestled into your lap, his focus back onto the firetruck that heâs playing with. for his age the kid is incredibly perceptive to the point where it spooks you out.
and if toji feels more like an idiot now, he doesnât say so.
â
âand weâre back! for those who have just joined us, y/n claims that her ex boyfriend is denying that heâs the father of their child to avoid child support payments.â
the clips of the past half hour play back as you sit down, the manilla envelope in your eye level making your heart race slightly. deep down you knew that he was the father so why was the anticipation making you doubt that?
the crowds cheering and whooping comes to a close once maury grabs hold of the manilla envelope, he opens it, dragging out the grand reveal for dramatic purposes as the suspense builds in the room.
âwhen it comes to two year old megumi fushiguro, toji⊠you are the father!â he announces setting off the crowd in a series of cheers. you look over at toji and notice the red flush that covers his neck and ears, a sure tell sign of embarrassment and guilt.
âall i gotta say is that i fucking told you so, hell i didnât even have to say anything you shouldâve known!â you said to him, as he did nothing but take the well deserved lecture from you.
toji felt really fucking stupid, like really stupid but he didnât want to add to your tirade already, he already wanted to melt of pure embarrassment under the hot studio lights. he really underestimated the lengths youâd go to prove him wrong.
âitâs time to start scrimping and saving, old man. food, clothes and diapers aint cheap. Iâm sure your poor race horses will understand right?â you said teasingly, biting back a laugh as you clapped his shoulder.
toji let out an annoyed huff as the sound of your laughter ricocheted in his head, the high from your victory lap still present. he couldnât be more of a fool if he tried. âhaha very funny.â he said drily, despite his head burning, now he owed you and shiu money over his stupid antics.
he knew that as long as the internet and tv were still around, he was never going to live this day down, knowing youâd use this moment to embarrass him and deservedly so.
âiâve been your host, maury! come back tomorrow where we have suguru and satoru. two former best friends and alleged lovers with satoru claiming that suguruâs affair with the kfc worker ruined their relationship!â