Ah fuck, why do this to međ
This is so not 2000 hot pink barbie core
I just thought of something really sad but at least it ends on a happy note.
Aventurine's partner leaving him after years of being together not so much because of his job but because they don't want to burden him.
This sucks the life out of Aventurine who immediately begs them to stay. Is it because of the gifts he gave them? He'll give them better gifts! Or is it their dates? No worries, he'll take them to better restaurants! He'll do better! Just, please, don't leave him. But it's too late, they're already out the door, much to his horror and grief.
In his desperation, he tries calling and texting them to no avail. As he sits in his office like a lifeless doll, he begins to laugh but it eventually turns into sobs. He doesn't even realize he's cried himself to sleep until he woke up from a dream where you're still with him.
Poor Aventurine couldn't eat anything without feeling nauseous and has to resort to consuming meal replacements. It's not healthy at all but what was he supposed to do? He's body rejects any food that isn't yours. His stress has increased yet he couldn't rest or sleep well without you.
As the days went by, he's just a mess; unkempt hair and wardrobe, red puffy eyes with dark bags, and he looked thinner. Then, one day, he ends up passing out. As his consciousness begins to fade, he swore he could hear your voice amongst the worried IPC members.
Aventurine wakes up in his room, dressed in his pajamas when he smells a familiar smell. He immediately gets out of bed and sprints towards the kitchen. There you were in an apron, cooking several of his favorite dishes. He felt his eyes get watery and his sniffles startled you and you spun around. Before you can ask him if he's alright, his arms are already around you. He begs for you to come back to him because he couldn't bare living another day without you or your presence. After sitting down and talking for hours, you two were able to rekindle your relationship.
That night, he slept with a full stomach and a happy feeling in his chest because you were back in his arms.
Oh my gosh, Aventurine-
But this immediately got me thinking about the other characters that would be completely destroyed if you left after being with him for so many yearsâŠ
Spoilers for Sunday~
-If you had been with Argenti for a long time and you suddenly decided it would be better if you went your separate waysâŠyeah. I think that would really throw him off his balance.
Youâre gone, youâre goneâŠyou were his everything, his Angel, and you were gone nowâŠwhat is he supposed to even do?? Pursuing beauty has such little meaning without you in his life. Whatâs the point of gazing upon beauty without someone to share it with?
Itâd be so hard to see Argenti like that. Heâs usually soâŠbright. So full of life. But now heâs lost his luster. Anyone who once knew him can tell somethingâs wrong. He used to be so happy, so interested in people, and spreading the name of Beauty and Idrila but now youâre gone so whatâs the point?
Heâs so uncharacteristically quiet now. You left your wedding ring on your pillow when you left, and now he carries it with him, in the small hope of one day returning it to you.
-Gallagher is a MESS. You couldnât have anticipated how much itâd really hurt him to leave butâŠyou had to. You couldnât handle being alone anymore, always justâŠwaiting for him to come home.
His life kinda falls apart. He becomes a little harsher in his security guard duties. He drinks more. He still has a picture of you in his wallet.
He misses you. Misses you so much. Heâs your pathetic ex-husband whoâs desperate to have you back. You get a lot of voice mails and text messages, but for some reason you donât have the heart to justâŠblock him.
Okay maybe a controversial take but Iâll say itâŠSunday is EMOTIONAL. Heâs already lost one person very important to him, and he had to act like it didnât shake him up, and now youâre leaving him, too?
He doesnât understand. Doesnt understand why youâre doing this to him. Doesnât understand why you must disappear tooâŠhasnât he already given enough? Why must you do this to him?
You just couldnât handle him anymore.
Maybe heâll finally break. He disappears from the public eye long enough for people to notice. For people to ask questions.
And when he finally appears again, thereâs no you in sight. Something is visibly wrong with him. Heâs missing feathers from his pretty wings, the deep bags under his eyes are hard to ignoreâŠAnyone can tell heâs just TRYING to hold it together, but heâs completely alone nowâŠhow okay can he be?
Even his little âIâm back and everythingâs FINEâ speech sounded incredibly wrong. Heâs not fine.
He misses you, he misses Robin, and it doesnât help that the Masked Fool is constantly shapeshifting into you just to mock him.
She loves making up all sorts of reasons for why you mightâve left.
Oh he was too mean to youâŠhe didnât give you enough attentionâŠyou found someone better than himâŠ
Heâs never wanted to hurt someone so badly before, but how could he raise his hand against someone who looks like youâŠ?
He will try to continue to suffer in silenceâŠbut who knows how long thatâll last before he finally breaks.
I need to remind u all that this tweet exists (I once made a post abt it, but I can't find it now â ïž)
scaramouche x reader, social media au (smau)
ââââ§ âș âș ă°
sypnosis: an obsessive fan has been following you around the block asking for a date and in an attempt to get him off your radar you tell him a random person on the street was your boyfriend, well surprise! it was the lead singer of a rival band, scaramouche!
genre: smau, fluff, suggestive, fake-dating, gender neutral reader, band au
disclaimer: late uploads because I have school
taglist: closed :(
featuring. . .
FORGET ME NOTS' | 6REEZE
SEASON 1
00 : prologue
01 : calm b4 the storm
02 : answer the phone
03 : lovers?
- 3.5 : kiss me
04 : past & present
05 : song writing
06 : about you
07 : tba
08 : annual comp
09 : oh.
10 : delivered
SEASON 2
11 : we need 2 talk
12 : coffee & convos
13 : tba
My family is still staying in half of the church that wasnât affected by the bombing because there is nowhere else to stay other than tents. They are limited to one small meal a day and one shower a week. They are sleeping on the floors, but no one can sleep since there is bombing everywhere around them. Even when there is no bombing, they can still hear the loud buzzing sound of the military planes above them, which would keep anyone who hears it awake. Along with everything, My grandma has diabetes and osteoporosis, so she canât walk. She has to take her insulin medication along with many others; however, she has run out of many of her medications.â Am on my knees requesting for donation. Target $450
I'm sorry I don't have any allowance, but I hope this small post of mine can help you reach your target!!
Leona Kingscholar (demon!Leona x demon hunter!Reader)
genre: mild supernatural, fluff?Â
note: late due to me forgetting itâs still a weekdayâŠwhoops
Summary: you get a kick out of debunking ghost stories and haunted places with the disgruntled Leona. Will you ever get to see anything?
series index
âIâm not staying in this dumpâÂ
âCome on! We've already come this far!â You pleaded, tugging at his arm but he stayed stable in his stance. Stupid Leona and his well-built body.Â
âDonât care. Weâre leavingâ Leona took a sniff and scrunched his nose in disgust. âThis place reeksâ
To be fair, Leona was right. Your latest adventure brought you two (you may have dragged Leona) to an abandoned house that was hidden in the dark lush of trees in the mountains. You two were still within city civilization but the destination took you deep into the mountain forest that became deserted because of the very house youâre about to visit. It was an old-fashioned home which meant the structures used old wood which was slightly decaying and if your research was correct, there was something else in the walls and floors that stunk horribly.Â
âCome on, I paid a lot for the current owner to let us visit. He even says that he let tourists stay overnight so itâs probably renovated somewhatâ you tried to persuade but he was unconvinced. How did you even convince him at all in the first place?
Oh right, because you were an idiot who didnât think that going alone to abandoned buildings where unsavory weirdos could jump you would be bad.Â
Good grief, you were oblivious.
âIâll do all of our house chores for the weekâ no response. âTwo weeks! Three!â
âŠÂ
And thatâs how Leona found himself getting ready to sleep in his familiar sleeping bag on a musky floor. The accumulation of dust that would typically appear in such an abandoned home is gone which he assumed was due to the numerous tourists or dumb ghost hunters that pass through these rooms, such as you.Â
âThis is so creepy, Leonaâ you said as you surveyed the leftover belongings of the decrepit room. âThey say that the last tenants here were demon fanatics and constantly did rituals here to try and summon themâÂ
Leona answered wordlessly with a grunt as he comfortably settled into his sleeping bag. You rolled your eyes but grew fondly used to it. You knew he was still listening so you continued.Â
âPeople said they succeeded, but instead of just summoning one demon, they left a giant portal for any creature to come through. They didnât know what to do and just left without closing itâÂ
âAnd you want to sleep here?âÂ
You shrugged âEvery place we visited was a bust for us. I figured trying this place was a good ideaâÂ
âDonât come crying to me tonight if this place finally breaks youâÂ
Not perturbed by his statement, you leaned gently down to your wild-haired partner and cheekily smiled down at himâ
âLike you would ever let anything happen to meâ
With that, you placed a quick peck on his nose before turning away to settle into your own sleeping bag next to him.Â
Leona was annoyed. Not so much at you (though heâs not happy over the stiff back he knows is coming in the morning) but himself at being so weak when it comes to you. Ever since he met you, you had him at your beck and call without you even realizing it. You never do.Â
You never realize how he tends to be extra grumpy the morning after in every site visit. You never realize he makes sure you donât notice the sudden chill in the air whenever you pass a particular spot in the room. You never notice the protective arm that hovers over your sleeping figure as Leona growls in at a foggy figure that dares to show itself in front of him, curious of the warm living human that is you.Â
âThis one is mineâ Leona spoke in a dangerous tone, warning the entities surrounding you of what's to come should they try anything. The specter leaves as quickly as they appear, not daring to mess with the dangerous aura that was seeping out from the human-like being.Â
Said being looked back at you, still slumbering deeply. Leona scoffed amused by you as he carefully pulled you closer to him, to which you unconsciously snuggled into him as a result.Â
Good grief, you were oblivious.
it has become an awful pattern of habit how much itoshi sae always shows up at your doorstep only when he wants to.Â
âdonât go out with oliver.â
and here he was again, like a recurring relapse that happens every single time you thought youâre doing better. the kind that hits when you think you're finally making progress, that momentary flicker of doing better before it all crumbles.
and you were. youâre doing good, doing better, but god, does it hurt like hell when he pulls stunts like this.
it was a relentless tug-of-war, a game he played so unfairly, leaving you with no rules, no defenses. you were damn sick of it.Â
âreally?â the word escaped as a scoff, a blend of disbelief and irritation coating your voice. âyou're showing up to my place at this hour just to say that?âÂ
a drawn-out exhale left sae's lips at your reaction, the scent of alcohol accompanying itâa scent foreign to the sae you'd known. was he drinking? itoshi sae doesnât drink â or at least the sae you knew would never let a single drop of alcohol taint his flesh.Â
âjust donât. heâll hurt you.â
a bitter laugh escaped you, âyou're one to talk about hurting people, aren't you?â
if you didn't know better, you'd mistake the look he shot you for something resembling an apology mixed with regret. but no, you knew that those eyes can never hold such, not for you, not for anyone.
ânews flash, itoshi. you donât have the right to decide who i can or cannot go out with.âÂ
âdonât i?âÂ
his challenge lingered in the air, a question not constrained by words but driven by conflicting wills, a daring meeting of gazes that had been evaded until now.
you're so fucking unfair, itoshi sae.
âleave,â you spat, your grip on the doorknob tightened, fingers almost digging into the cool metal.Â
âdonât i, y/n? do i not have a right to you?â
âplease, sae. just go,â you murmured, eyes squeezed shut, a trace of tears threatening to break free.
ââ because you have all damn rights to me that it fucking terrifies me.âÂ
and there it was.
the vulnerability he so fiercely and stubbornly concealed, laid bare for you to witness. it slipped out like an admission, raw and unguarded.
sae's insides churned as your gaze bore into him, the intensity of it feeling like a searing heat that left him exposed, his thoughts laid bare. it was as if you were looking at him as if he had grown a second head, an incredulity mirrored in his own disbelief at what he had just blurted.
but itâs the truth, a truth etched not in alcohol-induced haze but in the sobering clarity that you, ever loving you, terrified him.Â
âyouâ you terrify me," his words stumbled out, like he was admitting a secret he never meant to reveal. âyouâre the first thought that comes to my mind, and the last one before i sleep. i feel you everywhere, your presence, your absence â it terrifies me, y/n.âÂ
he ran a hand through his hair, a gesture of frustration that echoed the inner chaos he couldn't quite contain. the sting of alcohol just added to the jumble of thoughts, like mixing a cocktail of emotions he wasn't prepared to deal with.Â
sae had never been great with handling drinks, and here he was, wearing his heart on his sleeve, a little more vulnerable than heâd intended.Â
after all, a body so foreign to alcohol can only handle so much.
and it's ironic how that also applies to sae's acceptance of your love â like a liquor he's not used to, but still very much would like a taste.
he knew he had absolutely no right to show up here; he had no right to stop you from going out with another man; he had no right to claim a part of you, not after he shattered your heart because he was afraid of his own.
he knew that, but itoshi sae is selfish. he wanted you, terrifyingly so. he hoped â prayed, evenâno one will ever have you the same way he does.Â
and he meant that in the most selfish way possible. because, time and time again, itoshi sae was selfish, even more so when it came to loving you.
âit terrifies me,â he carried on, a touch firmer this time, his gaze unyielding as it held yours, âhow much you consume me, and it frightens me even more how much i would let you.â
âthen just let me, you stupid asshole.âÂ
the words burst out of you, a declaration that felt like a leap of faith. your arms instinctively reached out, embracing him as if to underscore your determination. you had caught his confession like a lifeline, and now it was your turn to throw your heart into the mix.
âand you have all the damn rights to me too,â you murmured against his lips.
the truth is, he doesn't deserve you, not in the slightest. but god, you want him toâ so bad. and after hearing what he said, you knew he wanted the same thing too.
you wrap your arms tighter around him, and it's like fitting together two missing pieces. you missed this, missed him. no amount of trying will ever relieve the longing. because truth be told, hearts aren't great at playing hide and seek; that much can be seen from the way youâre both holding on to each other.
âi'll love you slowly, until it's not scary, until you get used to it,â you whispered, forehead pressed against his.
in the quiet space between your whispered words, sae felt the world shift beneath his feet.Â
love with you wasn't meant to be frightening. love with you wasn't meant to be all-consuming.
love with you, he realized, only needed to be exactly like thisâ your fingers against his nape, a smile curving your lips, and the assurance in your gaze that promised better times ahead.
âiâll get used to it.â maybe the words came off wobbly, but he couldnât care any less now; it was a promise.
âyou better.â you let out a chuckle, genuine this time, and it took just one chuckle for sae to realize that everything will be just fine.Â
[extra]:
âsae?â
you pull his attention, sensing his wakefulness from the lingering kisses he peppers on your skin. the same man who laid bare his heart to you was sprawled within your sheets, his breathing gentle against your neck.
though his lips stay sealed, the comforting squeeze of your hand relays that he was listening.
âwhere did you hear that iâm going out with oliver?â
a brief pause, followed by a scoff. way to ruin a moment, saeâs inner voice grumbles at the timing of your question. why bring up another guy's name now, especially when he's shirtless and right above you? the nerve.
âdoesnât matter.â he dismisses your question.Â
yet, there's something oddly satisfying about riling up the usually composed sae, itâs one of your lifeâs greatest pleasures. and so, you press on, unable to resist the urge to tease.Â
âcome on, now. i want to know what made my cold and grumpy sae to show up at my door at 2 am, professing that i terrify him,â you pushed, meeting his irritated glare with an arched brow. ââ and donât give me that look. those were your words, not mine!â
tch. he clicks his tongue, fully aware you won't let him live down his confession. âgot it from shidou. he told me right before asking me to drink with him.â
as those words escape saeâs lips, you burst into laughter, leaving him to wonder if he broke you with last night's late-night affection.
âwhatâs so funny?â he raises an eyebrow at your sudden outburst.
âshidou tricked you into drinking with him, love. i turned down oliver without a second thought. we didn't even get close to going on a date,â you playfully reveal, your grin growing. âi kind of mentioned that to shidou. we share gossip occasionally, you know.â
sae froze at what you said, and he didnât need no damn mirror to see that he was turning red from the embarrassment and realization that he had been lured to drink.
âiâll kill him.â
âand iâll thank him.â may shidou get all the dopamine he so cunningly desires.Â
note. i also don't know what this is so don't look at me now :P i'm throwing tomatoes at myself
You, a struggling mage-in-training, tried to summon a majestic beast to escape your cursed fate in the botany stream.
Instead, you got Jade Leechâchaos incarnate, collector of mysterious jars, and disturbingly enthusiastic about plants.
He now lives in your dorm, calls you "Master" with a straight face and might be seducing you via herbal tea.
this is a present for @hyperfixating-rn <3 I'm very late but happy belated birthday!!
You were going to be a great mage. A legendary one. The kind they wrote poems aboutâlong, rhyming ones with unnecessarily dramatic metaphors. You had dreams. Ambitions. A Pinterest board titled "Epic Wizard Core." You practiced basic spells in your room, blew up your mirror once, and were 96% sure your magical aura was purple (which is obviously the most powerful one, everyone knows that).
So imagine your surprise when your entrance exam results came back and you were⊠sorted into the Botany stream.
Botany.
As in, plants.
As in, dirt and roots and sunlight and âcommuning with nature.â
You had never communed with nature. You had once tried to grow a cactusâthe most resilient plant known to humankindâand it had withered in protest within a week. You had named that cactus Spiky. Its death was a tragedy. A murder, some said. By you.
So naturally, you stood there on orientation day, holding your shiny new textbook titled âGreen is the Heartâs Color: Love and Magic in Leavesâ, with the same vibe as someone who had been given a live grenade and told to hug it.
Your fellow classmates looked excited. Eager. Too green, in more ways than one. You watched one of them gently cradle a sproutling like it was a newborn. Another was crying over the âbeautiful potentialâ of transpiration. Meanwhile, you were googling "can you accidentally poison poison ivy."
And then, of course, came your professor. You donât remember much from the orientation speech because you were too busy having a silent breakdown about the phrase "the gentle whisper of chlorophyll." But you do remember one very important thing:
Youâre in so much trouble.
You raised your hand at one point to ask if you were allowed to⊠switch majors. The professor smiled.
A warm, benevolent, lethal smile.
âOh, dear. The plants have chosen you.â
What does that even mean???
You donât know. But the tiny seedling on your desk keeps wiggling like itâs happy to see you. You donât trust it. You name it Vermin and pray it doesnât unionize with the moss on your windowsill.
You are a mage in training. A powerful wizard in the making.
And now you are at war⊠with horticulture.
After a week of trying to bond with leaves like they were long-lost family and nearly getting strangled by a particularly enthusiastic vine, you decided youâd had enough.
You needed a way out.
Not in the dramatic âstorm out of class, set fire to the greenhouse, and flee into the mountainsâ way. (Though it was on the table.)
You needed a loophole. An escape clause. A forbidden back door in the curriculum forged in ancient times by other students who had also accidentally murdered cacti.
So you did what any desperate, dignity-depleted mage-in-training would do.
You found a senior.
Now, seniors in mage school are like cryptids. Powerful. Elusive. Sleep-deprived. And terrifying in the way only people whoâve once accidentally turned themselves into a plant can be. Your chosen senior was sitting under a tree, drinking coffee from a mug that said âI survived Magical Ecology II and all I got was this mug and lifelong trauma.â
You approached, clinging to your textbook like it was a lifeline. âHi. Iâmâuh. Iâm not vibing with the flora.â
They looked up, eyes dark with knowledge and probably caffeine. âBotany stream?â
âAgainst my will.â
A pause. A long, sympathetic sip. Then: âYou have two options.â
Your heart fluttered. Hope! Salvation! Maybeâ
âOne: Fail everything, get held back a year, reapply next cycle. Pray the plants forget your face.â
âI canât afford that. Option two?â
âSummon a familiar so powerful, the faculty has to bump you into a combat-heavy stream for your own safety. And theirs.â
You blinked. âLike. A dragon?â
The senior shrugged. âSure. Or a demon. Or a vengeful raccoon. Anything above âmildly homicidal housecatâ works.â
âAnd then theyâll just⊠change my stream?â
âIf your familiar is terrifying enough, yes. Preferably something with fire. Fire fixes everything. Except greenhouses.â
You nodded slowly, feeling the stirrings of a Planâą. A terrible, beautiful, questionable plan.
"How hard is it to summon a familiar?" you asked.
They smiled, and it was not comforting.
âNot hard. Doing it without summoning something that wants to eat you is the tricky part.â
You thanked them and walked off into the distance, muttering under your breath and already flipping through your grimoires.
You were going to get out of this stream or die trying.
Hopefully neither.
But if a hellbeast had to be involved, wellâŠ
You were prepared to negotiate.
You had one job.
Just one.
Summon a powerful familiar. Save your future career path. Escape the dreaded Botany Stream before you're eaten alive by carnivorous radishes with anger issues and questionable ethics.
Youâd studied forbidden texts. Youâd drawn your summoning circle to perfect mathematical proportions using a protractor, three compasses, and something called âManifestation Oilâ you bought off a sketchy alchemy influencer.
You even lit candles by hand like a peasant. Thatâs how serious this was.
You had one last step: focus your intent. Picture what you wanted. Channel all your magic and will into the ritual. A dragon, perhaps. A fearsome spirit. A beast of legend. Maybe even a war general.
Instead, the unagi you were saving for dinnerâyour actual, literal eelâslid off the table mid-chant and splat landed right in the center of the summoning circle.
The summoning circle hissed.
You had precisely one second to scream âNO, YOU STUPID SLIPPERY FISHââ before the circle detonated.
There was light. Screaming wind. Something smelled vaguely of seaweed and crime.
When your retinas finally stopped sizzling and your ears recovered from their astral slapping, you looked up.
And there he was.
A tall, elegant man standing in the still-smoking circle, dusting off his sleeves like he hadnât just been yanked across the realms by an overcooked eel. His teal hair shimmered like deep water. Heterochromatic eyes. He looked like a minor sea god and a professional tax evader all rolled into one.
He tilted his head. Smiled. âThat was⊠dramatic.â
You stared. Still holding the empty microwave-safe eel tray like a sacrificial relic.
âI was trying to summon a dragon,â you croaked.
âAh,â he said, eyeing the smear of soy sauce in the center of the runes. âThen why the seafood?â
You didnât have an answer. Mostly because you were too busy silently screaming.
âI suppose Iâm what happens when your spell gets rerouted mid-delivery,â he continued, delight practically oozing off him. âFascinating. I'm Jade. Jade Leech.â
You, a mage of great ambition and even greater regret, took a deep breath and said the only thing that made sense.
ââŠAre you allergic to plants?â
Jade Leech, freshly yanked from the dark, swirling depths of somewhere much cooler than here, watched with the amused detachment of a man who had just witnessed his summoner go through all five stages of grief in under forty seconds.
You cursed the gods.
You cursed the stars.
You cursed your entrance exam, your cactus, your birth, and at one pointâyourself in third person.
He said nothing. Simply folded his hands behind his back and watched with the kind of serene interest normally reserved for people observing an exotic animal fling itself against glass.
Eventually, once your vocal cords began to shred from impassioned screaming (and possibly mild sobbing), you whirled toward him, red-eyed and wild-haired, and gestured at him in disbelief.
âAre youââ you wheezed, dragging a sleeve across your face, âperchance a dragon?â
He blinked slowly. His smile widened.
âPerchance?â
âI donât know!â you shouted. âYouâre tall! You appeared in a bunch of smoke! Your hair defies gravity! That could be dragon behavior!â
âHm.â He tapped his chin thoughtfully. âAnd if I say yes?â
You squinted. â...Do you breathe fire?â
âIâm more of a âpoison your tea and watch what happensâ sort of creature,â he replied, pleasantly.
You screamed againâthis time in cosmic betrayalâand stomped your foot so hard the candles trembled.
He made a note of this. You had good stomping technique.
âWell then what are you?!â you demanded.
He shrugged, like this wasnât a magical emergency and more of a casual day.
âA Moray Eel, technically.â
You stared at him. Then at the summoning circle. Then at the empty microwave eel tray still on the floor. Then back at him.
âOh my gods,â you whispered in horror. âThe unagi redirected the target circle. I was summoning a power dragon and the ritual downgraded to âlong sea worm.ââ
He chuckled. âHow dare you.â
âI wanted to cheat the system,â you whispered, falling to your knees like a tragic protagonist. âAnd the gods sent me seafood.â
âIâm standing right here, you know.â
You threw yourself to the ground and started sobbing into the floor.
Jadeâs smile grew wider. He might stay. This was already more entertaining than anything back home.
And honestly, watching you spiral was kind of charming.
Jade made tea.
You werenât entirely sure how or when. One moment, you were crumpled on the floor, dramatically mourning your dreams of becoming a cool elemental mage with a dragon familiar. The next, he was handing you a dainty teacup on a saucer you definitely didnât own.
There was a slice of lemon in it. The mug was warm. You were terrified.
ââŠDid you summon this tea set too?â you asked, eyeing the porcelain like it was going to explode.
âNo,â he said pleasantly. âIt was in your cupboard.â
âNo, it wasnât.â
He smiled wider. âWas it not?â
You stared at him. He stared back, sipping his tea with the calm of someone who knew exactly where every spoon in your home was and wouldnât hesitate to replace them with slightly longer spoons just to gaslight you.
You took a sip of the tea to assert dominance. It was delicious. You hated that it was delicious.
He watched you, unblinking. âSo. Why the desperate summoning?â
You groaned, slouching like the tea had robbed you of whatever spine you had left. âI got sorted into the botany stream.â
There was a silence. You sipped your tea again to drown in the shame.
Then his eyes sparkled.
You felt it. Like a shift in the atmosphere. Like the moment before a lightning strike. Like the second someone said, âTrust me,â and you woke up four hours later in a tree, covered in glitter and mild regret.
âOh,â he said, delighted. âBotany.â
âNo,â you said immediately. âDonât do that. Donât say it like that.â
âFascinating field, truly.â
âNope. Youâre not going to help me switch out, are you?â
He leaned forward, chin in his hand, elbow balanced too gracefully for someone who had appeared out of eel magic and poor life choices. âWhy would I do that? I think youâll thrive.â
âYou donât understand,â you said, pleading now. âI killed a cactus.â
âOh, I completely understand,â he said. âAnd I'm going to help you fulfill your potential.â
You froze. ââŠYou mean, like, help me survive until I transfer?â
âNo,â he said.
You dropped your cup. He caught it without looking. You wanted to scream.
The only thing worse than being a botany student⊠was being a botany student with a chaos eel who found fungi romantically intriguing as your familiar.
You were so doomed.
Unfortunately for everyone involvedâand by everyone, specifically youâmagic law was a clingy little thing. Once the summoning circle did its sparkly flashbang thing and delivered you one (1) butler-themed eel man, the universe basically clapped its hands, said âit is what it is,â and slapped a contract in your face.
Minimum term of servitude: one year.
âBut I didnât mean to summon him,â you argued to literally no one who cared. âThere was fish involved! It was a mishap, not a magical invocation!â
Jade, very unhelpfully sipping tea that you definitely hadnât bought, slid the scroll across the table toward you like a cheerful IRS agent. âIntent is only one part of the ritual,â he said with the infinite patience of someone who enjoyed watching trainwrecks in slow motion. âThe contract is already half-formed. You really should sign it before your house explodes.â
You stared at the scroll.
Then at him.
Then at the scroll again.
âDo I at least get a trial period?â you tried.
âNo,â he said, smiling.
âA free return policy?â
âNo.â
âIs there, like, an eel clause I can exploit?â
He chuckled. You were going to die in this major.
With the kind of reluctant grace that only someone whoâd just accidentally legally bound themselves to a smug sea-creature man could muster, you signed.
The moment the pen left the paper, the air shifted with a cozy little pop, as if magic itself was tucking you both in and whispering âcongratulations on your joint custody of chaos.â A faint glow danced around Jadeâs shoulders. Your window exploded.
(Youâd ask questions about that later.)
âThere we are,â Jade said, clasping his hands. âFamiliar and mage, officially contracted. Shall I begin compiling a weekly schedule for our fieldwork?â
âFieldâoh no.â
âOh yes,â he beamed. âWeâll be revisiting the entire kingdom flora catalogue, starting with mosses.â
You suddenly understood the reason why some mages went mad.
And unfortunately, youâd just handed yours the clipboard.
The next morning, you dragged yourself to class like a condemned soul to the gallows, weighed down by a sense of impending doom and also by the deeply unsettling realization that your familiar had organized your bookshelf by spore reproduction categories sometime during the night.
Everyone else looked so normal. There was someone with a fire spirit coiled lazily around their shoulders, someone else with a giant spectral wolf that radiated unbothered energy, and even one smug jerk with a miniature dragon who was definitely using it to cheat on practical tests.
And then there was you.
With him.
Jade stood a respectful half-step behind you, dressed like a mildly menacing butler who might also commit tax fraud if given the opportunity. He carried your books. He bowed to your professor. He smiled at your classmates.
You didnât trust that smile. That was the smile of a man who had definitely poisoned a royal court and got away with it by turning the queen into a toadstool.
Someone asked what type of spirit youâd summoned.
You opened your mouth to lie.
Jade answered for you. âThey were aiming for a dragon,â he said, serene as ever. âBut an eel will have to do.â
The entire class stared at you. You stared into the void.
âIt was the unagi,â you muttered, already defeated.
No one knew what that meant, but it sounded stupid, so they all laughed.
Jade patted your back like a supportive guardian. You were ninety percent sure it was to check your spine for eventual harvesting.
Gods help you. It was only the first period.
The Academy was in shambles.
Centuries of magical history. Thousands of successfully summoned fire spirits, storm wolves, mildly angry raccoons. And youâa botany major with a dead cactus on your recordâhad gone and summoned a person.
Not a ghost.
Not an illusion.
Not even a creepy guy pretending to be summonable.
No. A fully functional person.
âTechnically,â the Dean said, staring at the magical contract hovering over your heads, âyou⊠own him now.â
You almost threw up on the ornate rug.
Jade Leech, the man in question, just smiledâsharp, calm, entirely too pleased.
âThis is so cursed,â you whispered.
âOh no,â he replied sweetly. âThis is fate.â
And that was only the beginning of your descent into contractual hell.
Because Jade? Oh, he thrived under magical servitude. Took to it like a duck to water. Like an eel to crime.
He started calling you Master.
In public. Loudly. With emphasis.
âGood morning, Master,â he purred on the way to breakfast, gliding past stunned first-years who immediately assumed you were either very powerful or very into some stuff they werenât ready to Google.
âJade. Stop.â
âAs you command, Master.â
You tried reasoning with him. You begged. You threatened to cry in front of the Headmistress.
Didnât matter.
In fact, the more embarrassed you got, the worse it became.
âMaster, shall I carry your books?â
âNo.â
âYour lunch?â
âNo.â
âYour emotional baggage?â
âJadeââ
âAh, but you summoned me, Master. Now weâre bonded.â
You looked around, desperate for help, but every professor just kind of shrugged. Magical contracts were sacred. Breakable only through death, divine intervention, or, apparently, a system of interpretive dances before the moon goddess during a blood eclipse. None of which were happening before finals.
So now this was your life.
You were the âownerâ of a smug eel man in a waistcoat who made you do your homework, made better tea than your own grandmother, and insisted on calling you Master while looking like a very polite threat.
You used to be a normal student with no future in botany.
You should've just failed your exams like a normal student.
Jade settled into your dorm room like heâd been planning it for years. Which was frankly insane, considering youâd only accidentally summoned him a day ago.
You woke up the morning after signing the magically binding familiar contract to find your room⊠different. Not horrifyingly so, just enough to make your eye twitch. Your desk had moved three inches to the left. Your bookshelf now had labels. Your cactusâpreviously deceasedâwas somehow thriving in a suspiciously fancy ceramic pot.
And then there were the jars. Oh gods, the jars. They lined the shelves now in neat, alphabetized rows. Some were normalââChamomile,â âSea Salt,â âLavender Sprigs.â Others were less so. âTooth Collection (Domestic)â sat right next to âRainwater (For Legal Use Only).â You wanted to ask, but Jade had a look in his eye that said whatever answer you get, you wonât like it.
He also brewed tea every morning. Not the relaxing kind. The existential crisis in a cup kind. You drank one (1) polite sip and suddenly understood what âthe color elevenâ looked like. Your body remained seated but your soul went on a brief vacation.
You had no idea how, but you were scoring higher in Botany. You still couldnât identify a single plant, but Jade kept slipping you notes mid-lab with things like âThis one bites. Do not sniff.â or âLick at your own risk.â
So yes, your GPA was rising. Unfortunately, so was your blood pressure. And your heart rate. And your sense that you were, somehow, very much in danger.
Jade simply smiled every time you panicked. âYouâre thriving, Master,â heâd say, and sip his tea like he wasnât actively reorganizing your entire life.
You were not thriving. You were surviving. Barely.
The assignment was simple on paper: identify twenty local plants, label their genus, and list their magical and medicinal properties.
Which was all fine and dandy if you werenât a person who had accidentally killed a cactus by underwatering it because you âdidnât want to overwhelm it.âÂ
Youâd gotten through most of your academic career via a potent combination of vibes, frantic late-night study sessions, and an almost supernatural level of spite. But thisâthis was science. With labels. And botanical terminology. And leaves that all looked the same.
So, you did what any sane, desperate mage-in-training with poor decision-making skills and a total lack of botanical knowledge would do.
You brewed a bathtub-sized cauldron of universal poison antidote and decided youâd taste-test each plant to figure out which one was lethal and, by process of elimination, identify the rest.
Jade found you leaning over the cauldron, mumbling something about statistical mortality rates and chewing on a leaf like a feral squirrel trying to beat natural selection.
âI thought you were joking,â he said, in that same unsettlingly pleasant tone he always used when you were actively concerning him.
âI wasnât!â you declared. âThis is science, Jade. And survival. Iâve made enough antidote to survive an assassination attemptââ
âYou made it in your bathtub.â
ââand Iâm going to lick nature into submission.â
Jade sat you down at the table, folded his hands neatly, and asked youâpolitely but with the weight of an ancient curse behind itâto repeat your plan.
You did.
He stared at you.
You shifted in your seat.
He continued to stare, like a disappointed headmaster.
â...Okay fine,â you finally muttered. âIt is a bad plan.â
âThank you,â he said calmly. âWould you like to identify your plants using logic, reference books, and assistance from your familiar, or would you prefer a slow and humiliating descent into gastrointestinal regret?â
âI mean, when you say it like thatââ
âWonderful. Iâll prepare the tea.â
You hated how soothing (mostly) his tea was.Â
You found out purely by accident.
Your friend sat down at lunch with a heavy sigh and a tear-streaked face, muttering something about how their fox familiar had gone limp and glassy-eyed after being ignored for two days straight in favor of midterms. Apparently, he needed âemotional engagementâ and âfrequent pets.â
You had not known this. You had not known any of this.
You returned to your dorm in a panic.
Jade, as always, was seated like an eerie portrait come to life, sipping tea and reading a book that looked suspiciously bound in scales. He raised one eyebrow as you burst through the door carrying three different types of fruits and a hand-sewn blanket youâd made in Home Ec two years ago.
âI heard that familiars need enrichment,â you blurted. âDo youâare you enriched? Are you feeling under-enriched? Whatâs your favorite snack enrichment type? Is it eels? Oh no wait, is that cannibalism? I donât know your rules!â
Jade blinked slowly. âYou believe I am in poor health?â
âI donât know!â you wailed, thrusting the blanket at him. âI donât know the maintenance routine for familiars! You could be dying from sadness and I wouldnât know!â
He looked down at the blanket. It had uneven edges and a sewn-on mushroom that looked like it had witnessed terrible things. Slowly, he took it. Draped it over his lap. Sipped his tea again.
âYou are a very considerate Master,â he said with a pleased little smile that absolutely shouldnât have made you feel like youâd just earned an A+ in Familiar Wellness. âI feel much better already.â
You werenât sure if he was messing with you or not. But then he let you tuck the blanket around his shoulders like a shawl, and even let you hand-feed him a strawberry.
You decided you didnât care if he was messing with you. His ears were flushed. That was a win.
You needed Nightshade. Not the safe kind eitherâthe real, reactive stuff that tended to hiss if the humidity wasnât just right and once exploded in someone's bag for being stared at wrong.
Unfortunately, your professors had firmly, repeatedly, and increasingly frantically refused to let you anywhere near it. Something about âprior incidents,â âa trail of fire ants through the dorm hallway,â and âwe are begging you to stop licking mystery leaves.â
But you had an experiment to finish, and a lack of official approval had never stopped a single mage in history. Which was how you found yourself sneaking into the restricted greenhouse under cover of darkness, with your overly smug eel-familiar following like he was on a stroll and not a felonious B&E.
âThis is clearly illegal,â Jade said cheerfully, as he helped you pick the lock.
âYouâre a summoned being. Laws donât apply to you,â you muttered, shoving the door open.
âThatâs speciesist,â he said mildly, and you ignored him on purpose.
The two of you tiptoed through rows of glowing plants, whisper-bickering the whole way.
âDonât touch that. It screams.â
âYou scream.â
âYes, and I have a great voice.â
He huffed a laugh. You tried not to grin. You failed.
Honestly, it wouldâve been a perfectly stupid and smooth heistâuntil the Shrike Vine noticed you. Apparently it was pollination season and it was feeling bitey. You froze as a thick green tendril snapped toward you like a whip.
Except it never hit.
Jade moved faster than you thought was possible. One hand caught the vine mid-strike, the other calmly flicked a tiny blade across it like he was trimming hedges instead of saving your life.
And then, because he was a menace, he leaned in closeâjust enough for you to catch the sharp gleam in his mismatched eyesâand murmured:
âIâm very good at protecting whatâs mine.â
You were not about to combust in a greenhouse. You were not. Absolutely not.
Still. Your face was hot. You blamed the bioluminescent plants.
âWhâThatâs notâyou canât just say things like that,â you hissed.
He tilted his head, looking unbothered and devastatingly pleased. âWhy not?â
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Pointed at the vine. âIs that one safe to lick?â
âAbsolutely not.â
ââŠCool, cool, just checking.â
The incident itself wasnât even your fault this time, which was frankly insulting, considering you usually caused at least 70% of the department's arcane emergencies.Â
No, this time it was Jeremy from Spell Calculus who accidentally overcharged a fire enhancement glyph and sent a wayward jet of magic careening through the lab like a feral gremlin. It ping-ponged off three protective wards, vaporized a desk plant, and promptly singed your familiar.
Specifically: Jadeâs sleeve caught a little fire. For exactly three seconds.
The sleeve was barely charred. His skin wasnât even red. He smirked.
You, however, reacted like youâd just watched him be stabbed in the heart by a divine lance.
âOH MY GOD YOUâRE BURNINGâARE YOU OKAY?! Is it fatal? Itâs fatal, isnât it?! Whatâs the protocol for familiar injury?! Do you need a resurrection spell?? Should I call the nurse or the exorcistâ?!â
Jade, blinked once. Then calmly patted the faintest whiff of smoke from his robe and said, âI believe Iâll live.â
But the glint in his eyes said he smelled weakness. And he would absolutely exploit it.
The next morning, you showed up with a full care basket: enchanted cooling balm, a wonky scarf youâd panic-crocheted in the night, a potion for nerve regeneration (completely unnecessary), and a whole assortment of healing snacks from the infirmary vending machine.
You even hand-fed him a soothing honey drop.
That was your next mistake.
Because the very next day, Jade reclined across your bed like a drama major rehearsing for a role in âThe Dying Swan: A Magical Tragedy.â He had a lukewarm towel across his forehead, your blanket wrapped dramatically around his shoulders like a cape, and a very deliberate look of fragile suffering.
âAlas,â he whispered, placing the back of his hand to his (completely fine) forehead, âI fear the lingering effects of the trauma are⊠worsening. Thereâs a tightness in my chest. I may never wield a kettle again. My tea senses are dulled.â
You squinted at him, deadpan. âYou brewed two pots this morning.â
âFor you, dearest Master,â he said, with an exaggerated wince. âBut at what cost?â
You refused to indulge him. For about ten minutes.
Then he started coughing. Badly. Into a silk handkerchief. That you were pretty sure heâd dabbed with food coloring beforehand to resemble blood.
âDo you think you can bring⊠strawberry lollipops?â he asked, voice trembling. âBefore I pass on to the next world.â
You shoved five into his mouth. âYouâre not dying. But you are insufferable.â
He sucked dramatically on the sweets, sighing. âI find this treatment emotionally compromising.â
You fed him another one.
And started plotting your revenge with a very bitter herbal ârecoveryâ tea. It smelled like wet moss and tasted like betrayal.
He drank it all. Smiled. Said it âadded intrigue to the healing experience.â
You were no longer sure who was winning this war. But you were definitely losing your mind.
It started subtly. Jade would casually set a teacup in front of you in the mornings, unprompted. Youâd ignore it. Heâd raise an eyebrow. Youâd argue that caffeine was a food group and you didnât need anything else, thank you very much.Â
Heâd say something cryptic like âIâd rather not have to explain malnutrition-related hallucinations to the administration,â and then slide you a plate of suspiciously elegant finger sandwiches.
Somehow, youâd end up eating them.
A week later, you found yourself sitting down for actual breakfastâtea, toast, even fruitâwithout remembering how it happened. Heâd simply adjusted your routine. Quietly. Steadily. Like a moss infestation with an agenda.
He began packing you lunch. Bento-style. With little hand-drawn labels.
You didnât even know when he started doing it. You just opened your bag one day, reached for your emergency gummy stash, and pulled out a thermos of miso soup and a side of rice balls shaped like sea creatures.
He started accompanying you to the dining hall under the excuse of "needing seaweed access." He monitored your meals. Commented on vitamin intake. Replaced your sugar gummies with dried fruit. Told you that if he caught you drinking energy drinks for dinner again, heâd report you to botanical safety for trying to poison a living plant (Vermin had still not recovered from the one time you tried to share a Monster with it).
Eventually, your friendâsweet, concerned, possibly one skipped breakfast away from passing outâcornered you between lectures.
"Hey," she said, tugging your sleeve with wide eyes. âI need to ask you something and I donât want you to freak out.â
You, holding a bento box labeled âDonât Forget to Finish Your Spinach, Masterâ with a small smiling mushroom drawn on it, tilted your head. âOkay?â
She glanced around, lowered her voice, and whispered, âWhoâs the familiar here?â
You stared at her.
She stared back.
In the distance, Jade waved at you politely while handing a professor a jar of suspicious glowing jam.
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Thought about how heâd reorganized your pantry by nutritional pyramid. Thought about how your life had improved and yet somehow spiraled out of your control in the exact same breath.
âI⊠donât know anymore,â you whispered back.
And that was the beginning of your existential crisis about power dynamics, dietary fiber, and eel-based emotional manipulation.
The more you thought about it, the more the terrible, horrifying truth settled in: Jade had been slowly taming you.
Not in a leash-and-collar kind of way (though you werenât entirely convinced he wouldnât enjoy that visual), but in the slow, methodical way one might tame a particularly wild housecat. One that hissed at vegetables and believed microwaved instant noodles were the pinnacle of culinary achievement.
When youâd first summoned himâon accident, via unagi-induced chaos and a summoning circle that was technically illegal in five countriesâyouâd been expecting a fae general. A terrifying beast of war. A dragon, maybe.Â
What you got was a polite, well-dressed man with a smile that could curdle milk and the calm demeanor of someone whoâd enjoy watching your academic career spontaneously combust.Â
You were sure he would spend his time reclining in your dorm like some cryptid, sipping tea while you panicked over assignments and singlehandedly ruined your chances at survival in botany.
That had been your first impression.
But it wasnât what happened.
Instead, Jade made it his mission to ruin you in the most terrifying way imaginable: through care.
He made sure you ate. He brewed tea tailored to your stress levels. He reorganized your notebooks by topic and color-coded them while claiming he was âbored.â He calmly extracted you from five different poison ivy incidents. He taught you how to pronounce âphotosynthesisâ correctly after you spent an entire presentation calling it âplant vibes.â
And you hated to admit itâbut it worked.
You stopped waking up in a panic. You stopped considering glitter glue a legitimate potion ingredient. You even passed a midterm without attempting to bribe a forest fairy.
It was subtle. Devious. Soft.
And worst of all, it was making you feel warm. Cared for. Grounded.
You used to dream of summoning a dragonâa grand, legendary familiar that would impress the entire academy and maybe light your homework on fire for dramatic effect. But now?
Now you watched Jade hum to himself in your kitchen, cooking something that smelled like lemon and dreams, and you didnât care about dragons. Or status. Or changing streams.
You just wanted to figure out if there was a spell that could describe the exact way your heart skipped when he smiled at you and called you âMasterâ with that infuriating glint in his eye.
And if not⊠well. Maybe youâd make one.
From Jadeâs point of view, your summoning had all the signs of an impending disasterâand thus, a highly enjoyable evening.
The circle was sloppy, the candles were the wrong color, and the ambient magical pressure was off by several kilopascals. The unagi that had plummeted into the center as a last-minute offering had been particularly concerning. Jade had arrived in a flash of light and fish-scented smoke, bracing for either mortal peril or at least a good laugh.
And then he saw you.
Wide-eyed. Covered in ink. Mumbling about âhoping for a dragon or something.â The perfect storm of magical desperation and zero planning skills. He had thought youâd be amusing. A novelty. A fun little side project to pass the time while bound by contract for a year.
And at first, that was exactly what you were. You were so spectacularly bad at botany that Jade was convinced you were a social experiment.
You called mushrooms âleaf meat.â You once referred to an entire genus of plants as âthe crunchy ones.â And your plan to identify herbs by tasting them like a medieval poison tester had nearly given him a stroke. (Emotionally. Heâs far too composed for physical symptoms.)
But somewhere between force-feeding you actual meals and dragging you out of exploding greenhouses, Jade started feeling⊠something. Not just amusement. Not just secondhand horror.
Affection.
It was awful.
So naturally, he did what any emotionally stunted eel-man would doâhe ramped up the teasing. Called you âMasterâ in public. Smiled just a little too sharply. Hovered with a quiet attentiveness he pretended wasnât genuine.
But when he thought back to that summoningâyour hopeful eyes, the half-charred fish, the complete magical disasterâJade realized something horrifying.
He owed his current happiness to a piece of grilled eel.
The next time he saw unagi on a menu, he gave it a respectful nod. After all, not every familiar bond is forged through fate, fire, and ancient prophecy.
Some are forged through sheer dumb luck and seafood.
You had always believed, deep in your feral little heart, that if you ever fell in love, it would be with the intensity of a meteor crashing into the earth. There would be pyrotechnics. An orchestra. Maybe a cursed bouquet of sentient mushrooms arranged in the shape of your initials. Something properly dramatic.
You were prepared for a sweeping romance. A declaration shouted from a balcony. A confession under a blood moon. At the very least, a sword fight followed by heavy breathing and an emotionally repressed kiss.
What you were not prepared for was... a random morning.
More specifically: today morning at 6:42 a.m., in your tragically unventilated dorm kitchen, where you shuffled in half-awake, wearing a blanket like a disgruntled ghost. Your hair looked like it had seen war. Your socks didnât match. You were only conscious due to residual academic panic and caffeine withdrawal.
And there Jade was. Crisp and awake and annoyingly gorgeous, as usual, humming some eerie little tune while cooking god-knows-what on your stove. The sunlight framed him like he was in a toothpaste commercial. There were suspicious jars open on the counter labeled things like âFenugreek??? (Maybe)â and âDo Not Inhale.â
He glanced at you over his shoulder, amused. âGood morning, Master.â
You grunted. It was too early for sarcasm or formal titles.
So, with the sleep-deprived logic of a creature who had survived exclusively on coffee and academic desperation, you trudged over to him, latched onto his waist like a needy koala, and rested your cheek against his back.
You did not plan this. Your body moved on its own, possessed by the Spirit of Affection.
To his credit, he didnât question it. Jade simply chuckled, adjusted his stance, and offered you a spoonful of something suspiciously green and steaming.
You tasted it. Your neurons barely fired. It was delicious and probably illegal.
And then, without thought, without warning, still pressed against him and one brain cell away from sleep, you mumbled, âI love you.â
There was a beat of silence.
You blinked.
Wait.
Waitâ
What the hell did you just sayâ
YOU SAID THAT OUT LOUDâ
Jade paused with the spoon still in his hand, his entire body going still like a predator that just heard something interesting. Thenâslowly, like he was savoring itâhe turned.
He looked at you. He really looked at you. And then, in true chaos spirit fashion, he grinned.
Not his usual polite smile. No. This was different. This one had teeth.
âOh?â he said, softly. âOh?â
And that was the moment you realized: you had said those three words to a man who considered emotional vulnerability an invitation to hunt.
You tried to backtrack. Tried to say you meant âI love youâr soup.â
Or âI love you as a friend. A colleague. A sentient eel.â
But before you could decide on your lie of choice, he leaned down and kissed you.
It started sweet. Gentle. Thoughtful, like maybe he was giving you time to flee.
You didnât. That was your mistake.
Because then his hand slid around your waist, and the kiss deepened, and suddenly your kitchen felt too small, and too warm, and definitely not rated for public indecency. Your legs threatened to give out. Your brain flatlined.
When he pulled away, you were breathless and dazed. You looked at him, heart hammering, pupils blown wide.
He tilted his head, still grinning, and said, âYou taste like honesty. How rare.â
You briefly considered combusting on the spot.
And as he turned back to the stove like nothing had happened, humming again, you realized something terrifying:
You were in love.
And you were the prey.
And you were kind of okay with that.
When familiar contract renewal season arrivedâaccompanied by the usual administrative chaos, enchanted paperwork that bit fingers, and panicked first-years realizing their mushroom toadlings had exploded againâyou were⊠calm.
Weirdly, suspiciously calm.
You should have been stressed. You were, after all, still a mage in training with a botany grade being held together by duct tape, blind luck, and the sheer force of your familiarâs passive-aggressive hovering.
But no. You werenât worried. Because somehow, over the past year of accidental poisonings, illegal greenhouse heists, and near-romantic tea-induced hallucinations, you and Jade had fallen into something far more dangerous than summoning magic: mutual affection. Possibly even love. Terrifying.
And yet, when the day came, you expected a conversation. A little back and forth. Maybe some dramatic flourish on his partâJade had a flair for drama and mild emotional terrorism, after all. At the very least, you thought heâd present a contract with a smirk and some cryptic line about âservitude never being quite so delightful.â
But he didnât.
You woke up one morning to find him already seated at your desk, as if heâd been waiting all night. The early sun filtered through your window, highlighting the soft teal of his hair and the amused glint in his eyes. You were still blinking the sleep out of yours, shuffling over in your raccoon-print pajamas with all the grace of a zombie when he slid the document toward you.
A thick, arcane-heavy contract. One that glowed softly at the edges. Titled:
âPERMANENT FAMILIAR CONTRACT â LIFELONG BONDâ
Your eyes snagged on the signature line.
His name was already there.
Signed in an elegant, curling script with a wax seal that looked like an eel tail. No jokes. No teasing. No loopholes.
You stared at the paper. Then at him.
ââŠYou want to be stuck with me forever?â you asked, because your brain short-circuited and apparently decided that was the most romantic response it could muster.
Jade raised a brow. âYou make lifeâinteresting,â he said, voice inflected with all the warmth and amusement of someone who once watched you attempt to eat a venomous berry âfor science.â
You blinked again. âThatâs not a no.â
âItâs a yes,â he said easily, his smile softening. âIâd like to be yours. If youâll have me.â
You didnât even hesitate.
You picked up the pen and signed your name beneath his. The moment the ink dried, the paper vanished in a swirl of moss-green smoke, the pact sealed with a pleasant little magical ding.
âSo,â you said, heart thudding in your chest as you looked up at him, âweâre really doing this.â
âWe are,â he said.
âForever is a long time.â
âNot nearly long enough.â
And you had to kiss him after that, because what else do you do when your familiarânot-quite-boyfriend-but-very-possibly-soulmate says something like that?
He kissed you back like heâd been waiting years. And you let him, sinking into his arms like it was the only place youâd ever belonged.
You, a chaotic disaster of a botany student. Him, a merman familiar who brewed tea that could bend time.
A perfect, absurd, slightly terrifying match.
Later that evening, when you sat together on the windowsill, legs tangled and laughter echoing, you realized something else: you'd meant to find a way out of the botany stream. A bigger future. A stronger school of magic.
But with Jade by your side, maybe botany wasnât a prisonâit was just where you bloomed.
It started, as most disasters in your life did, with you tripping over your own feet. Specifically, youâd tripped face-first into a rare carnivorous plant while trying to impress your professor with your âinnovative approach to hands-on learning.â (Your professor had screamed. The plant had screamed louder. You still didnât know plants could do that.)
And while you were nursing your slightly-bitten pride and applying salve to your dignity, some golden-haired, obnoxiously perfect fourth-year had wandered over, all pristine robes and condescending smiles.
âYou know,â he said to Jade, completely ignoring you like you were a decorative shrub, âitâs a shame. A familiar with your magical potential? Tied to someone whoâs clearly... not invested in their future.â
You scoffed. Loudly. âExcuse you. I am very invested in my future. I just think the universe should meet me halfway and stop putting venomous moss in my study patch.â
The student didnât even blink. âYou deserve a master who challenges you. Who brings out your best.â
Jade tilted his head, politely smiling the way a shark might if it had impeccable manners and was about to swallow a surfer whole.
âI see,â he said, sipping his tea. âAnd that would be⊠you?â
âWhy not?â the student said, and you hated how confident he sounded. âThey're wasting you.â
You froze.
You knew it wasnât true. Jade had chosen you. Signed a lifelong contract. Literally brewed you soup after you set your eyebrows on fire.
But the words stung in a way you hadnât expected.
You tried to play it cool. Shrugged. âIf he wants to leave, he can. No oneâs stopping him.â
Jadeâs eyes flicked toward you, a tiny crease between his brows. âIs that what you think?â
You shrugged again. Forced a smile. âWhy wouldnât it be? Go ahead. Take your tea. Find a master who challenges you.â
And with that, you walked away, head high, hands clenched so tight your knuckles cracked.
You spent the rest of the night trying not to cry into your pillow.
The next morning, your pillow was suspiciously warm. And breathing.
You cracked open one eye to find Jade wrapped around you like a clingy snake with boundary issues and an attitude problem.
âWhatâJadeâget offâ!â
âIâm sleeping,â he said.
âYou are not! Youâre emotionally ambushing me!â
He didnât move. Just curled tighter.
You squirmed, shoved, flailed. Nothing worked. The man had the tensile strength of a vine and the stubbornness of ten toddlers.
Eventually, you gave up and pouted at him. âYou were mean yesterday.â
âI wasnât trying to be,â he admitted cheerfully, his tone dangerously close to smug. âBut in my defense, I expected my master to realize I have taste.â
You sulked harder. âYou owe me.â
âOh?â
âAnd Iâm cashing it in later.â
âOf course, Master.â
ââŠStop calling me that in the dorm.â
âNo.â
You didnât bring it up again. But the next day, as you passed that fourth-year in the hallway, he looked pale, shaken, and was clutching a charm pouch so tightly it mightâve become a fossil.
You glanced at Jade. He looked serene. Suspiciously serene.
ââŠWhat did you do?â you whispered.
âMe?â he smiled. âNothing serious.â
You stared at him. He sipped his tea.
You decided you definitely werenât asking.
But later, when he draped himself across your bed again and offered you a cup of calming lavender-citrus tea with a wink, you realized one thing:
You may be a borderline disaster of a mage, but Jade Leech was yours. And gods help anyone who forgot it.
You'd been holding back.
It wasn't that you were scared. Okay, noâyou were absolutely terrified. Because the âwhat are weâ question carried the weight of galaxies, of shifting dynamics and possible heartbreak, and you werenât emotionally prepared to deal with that when you were already behind on your fungal studies and had just accidentally set your robe on fire trying to dry herbs.
Still, it was getting harder and harder to ignore the fact that Jade Leech, your familiar, your chaos partner, your maybe-something-more, had kissed you good morning again that day. Just a soft brush of lips while you were half-asleep, before you could even form coherent thought. And youâd just blinked at him, dazed and blushing and maybe a little dead inside.
And then that horrible, arrogant, no-chin-having senior from the advanced familiar studies track saidâloudlyâthat if someone like Jade were his familiar, heâd âtreat him properlyâ and ânot waste potential on a person who still mistakes fertilizer for potion ingredients.â
You saw red. Possibly green. Maybe fuchsia, depending on how much of Jadeâs tea was still in your system. But whatever the color, something snapped in your soul.
Because no one was taking Jade from you.
Not when he brewed you anti-headache tea with honey because he knew you hated bitter things. Not when he cleaned your desk with the gentleness of a man legally married to your organization system. Not when he smiled at you like you were a curious algae bloom he couldn't stop poking at. Not when he kissed your forehead, your temple, your nose, your cheekâlike loving you was as natural as breathing.
So.
You marched.
You stormed into your dorm room where he was casually rearranging his jar collection (you didnât ask, you'd learned not to the hard way.) and pointed an aggressively trembling finger at him.
âBe mine!â you shouted.
Jade blinked once. Then tilted his head, that infuriatingly pretty smile already forming. âI thought I already was, Master.â
Your brain combusted. You flailed. âHuh?!â
âI assumed the constant kissing and emotional intimacy might have been a clue.â His eyes sparkled. âShould I have drawn a diagram? I could make a chartââ
You launched yourself at him in mortified fury. âNo charts!â
He caught you with practiced ease, laughed that horrible, lovely laugh of his, and kissed you againâthis time slower, deeper, like heâd been waiting for this exact moment.
You melted. Fully collapsed like overwatered moss in his arms.
When you finally came up for air, dizzy and giddy and mildly offended at how good he was at this, he tucked a strand of your hair behind your ear and murmured, âNow that weâve established that⊠shall we discuss what weâre calling the wedding mushrooms?â
You screamed into his shoulder.
He laughed again.
And that night, you dreamed of rings made of sea glass and mushrooms that glowed softly in the dark.
i still can't believe this is his bed hair like dude...wtf???
it looks amazing on you sweetie <3
insider story with kenma and hinata:
đđđ // đđđđđđđđđđđđđ: đđđđđđđ
+ sae x f!reader | wc 5k | content: angst to fluff, breakups, exbf!sae, exes to lovers
notes: this is the alternate ending to conversations ! (requested by one of my anons) iâm so sorry this took so long !!! and iâm 100% sure you did not expect me to write anything this long but iâm sorry my hand slipped >_< again ⊠iâm super rusty but i hope you guys still like this ^_^
summary: saeâs willing to throw everything else away to prove that out of everything in his life, youâre the one sure thing he needs. problem is, will you accept him after what heâs done?
heâs sorry.
he repeats it in his head, over and over again, his fingers almost numb from repeatedly pressing the call button on your numberâover and over and over again.
sorry, sorry, sorry.
itâs no use, he knows. itâs why heâs hereâwhy heâs taking a flight, bare-handed, back to japan, back to home, back to you.
âplease switch off your phone, sir,â the flight attendant says politely, dutily, as the plane starts to move.
begrudgingly, he resigns, but the moment he starts hearing your voicemail message play, he sighs, speaking into the receiver.
âlook, i know i fucked up and it was stupid of me to keep it from you. iâm sorry, okay? and i know you donât want to speak to me right now but i canât just sit around and do nothing. i love you, so iâm coming back home, and weâll talk, and then⊠i promise you, nothing like this will happen again.â
yes, because heâll make sure of that. heâll make sure he doesnât make decisions like a stupid teenage boy and heâll make sure to trust you at every turn instead of trying to hide anything from you because youâre right. never in the course of your relationship did you ever doubt sae.
which is a feat. because given his profession and status, any number of girls wouldâve been distrusting had they been in your position. not that sae knows, what can he say he knows about girls? nothing, apparently. after today, that much is sure.
as he turns his phone on aeroplane mode, he throws his head back and looks out of the plane window. less than a day till heâll be there to see you in person. heâs not sure if youâre going to even want to see him, but heâll try. you deserve that much, at least.
in his head, the same words repeat over and over again.
iâm sorry.
i love you.
youâre all i ever want.
by the time saeâs plane touches down, itâs night time in japan, close to midnight. you should be resting, probably tired out from crying; he can imagine, because stupid as he may be, he can at least say he knows you this much.
your words can be hard, cold, cruel, but you never are. youâre all soft inside, and youâd rather face your emotions alone than let anyone know how you feel. at least, when those emotions concern sae. youâll keep them to yourself and keep crying, day after day, until you canât find it in yourself to care anymore.
passport in one hand, his phone in another, he whisks off toward the taxi stand, mind in a mess because his phoneâs now ringing with messages from everyone that isnât you, probably concerning his absence from the last match of the tournament.
fuck the final match.
you probably thought heâll play anyway. that heâll play the match, and only afterwards would he attempt things further with you.
funnily enough, thatâs what sae used to think too. before any of this happened. never in his life did he think heâd sooner rather sabotage his own career than lose you. itâs laughable, really, how much heâs so afraid of losing you that it clouds his judgement.
he shouldâve been honest with you from the start instead of letting you find out on your own. it was that easy.
âcould you step on it, please?â sae sighs, irritated at everything keeping him from you; the distance, the traffic, the stupidity.
the taxi driver narrows his gaze at sae through the rear view mirror, clearly annoyed. âiâd rather not get a ticket,â he replies monotonously, and sae sees that heâs driving at the speed limit. âwouldnât want to get into an accident, would you?â
well, if he did, that would put a real hamper in his plans, so sae just shuts up and switches off his phone. none of them are you anyway. thereâs no point.
as he stares out the window at the now-quiet city, he finds that, for the first time, heâs afraid of losing everything.
mira [7.28pm]: make sure you get enough rest! bought some soup for you in case you havenât eaten :)
you look at the time nowâ12.14am. fuck, did you really sleep the entire day away?
the sliver of moonlight that shines through your blinds is all you see next to the pitter patter of the heavy rain against your window. itâs pathetic, really, for you to take a day off just because of that argument (if you can really call it that) the night before. you couldnât bring yourself to even watch his game like youâd promised him you always would, once upon a time.
something tells you that he should expect that, though. even without watching his game, you know theyâd win. sae has always been magical like that, being the playmaker he is. you imagine heâs probably with his team now, celebrating the win. or are they asleep right now? you never could get used to the time difference. itâs too much of a headache.
aside from mira, you see a voicemail message in your inbox. from sae. it makes your heart skip a beat. are you even ready to hear him and whatever he has to say? itâs why youâd been avoiding him since yesterdayâyouâre afraid youâre just going to crumble and forgive and get taken advantage of. it threatens to spin the same old story youâve always known.
you click on it anyway.
âlook, i know i fucked up and it was stupid of me to keep it from you. iâm sorry, okay? and i know you donât want to speak to me right now but i canât just sit around and do nothing. i love you, so iâm coming back home, and weâll talk, and then⊠i promise you, nothing like this will happen again.â
will it though? how much can you trust his words after he already failed once? it makes you think twice, no matter how badly you want to forgive him because you do believe him. itâs most likely nothing, and what he said is most likely true, but it makes you upset that he thought of hiding such a thing from you.
just as you toss your phone aside, you hear a series of urgent knocks on your door, the thunder ruthless outside. slowly, you get up, dragging your feet against the hardwood floors and flinching a little as you hear how loud the banging is. youâre half afraid and half agitated, halfway between hiding yourself under the covers and threatening to kill whoever it is outside.
but then you swing the door open and youâre met with that pair of teal eyes youâve always loved, his bangs matted against his face as he pants, the rainwater drenching him from head to toe.
ây/n,â he calls out, as though itâs been ages since he last heard from you. itâs only been a day, but itâs enough to make sae feel as though itâs been forever.
youâre a little shocked, your brain trying to process every single question that comes to mind.
is that really him? why isnât he in spain? if he played the game, the timeline doesnât add upâhow did he get here so fast? is this actually a dream? holy crap it feels so real, though? why isnât he saying anything?
âs-sae?â
youâre not even sure if you said that out loudâyouâre a little too shocked to make sense of anything right now. but the moment the corner of his lips tug upward, revealing that lopsided smile you love, you know itâs real.
heâs here.
âi⊠came to talk,â is all he can say. heâs tired from running up the stairs. apparently tonight, everything was against him. there was an accident right at the street before the corner of your apartment, so heâd had to end the trip early and start running for it. by the time he got here, the elevators for your block were all undergoing maintenance and unusable. but fuck if twenty flights of stairs are enough to make him turn away.
youâre blinking a lot, as if you find it unbelievable that heâs here in the first place, but you nod anyway and step aside to let him in, wet clothes and all.
âhow was work today?â
itâs definitely not what he came here from spain to talk about but you entertain it anyway.
âdidnât go,â you tell him, a little coldly, but you think he deserves that much, at least. âhow was the game?â
âdonât know, didnât go.â
you two are similar that way.
âwhy not?â
âi had other important things to do.â
âyou do? pray tell.â
itâs the first time saeâs hearing you like this and heâs sure now that he never wants to make you like this ever againâgoing against your nature.
itâs lame, and overused, and you deserve an essay for why he shouldnât and wouldnât ever do this again to you but itâs sae and heâs never sure whatâs good in these situations so all he can manage to say is, âiâm so sorry.â
you cross your arms as the both of you stand in your dimly-lit living room, the storm raging on outside. itâs not like you donât know that. that aside, youâre pretty sure heâs the most sorry heâs ever been. and if you were still the same naive girl you used to be ten years ago you probably wouldâve forgiven him by now.
but youâre not.
âokay, is that all?â
itâs not what you really want to say. you kind of just want this to be a dream; that picture of him and that random girl with their lips locked, that fight that you had that made you cry to sleep. you wish it was some sort of stupid nightmare that didnât make him ruin your trust but it did.
sae, on the other hand, seems restless. heâs taken aback, not quite sure how to get through to you because heâs never made a mistake like this before. âjust- could you⊠forgive me?â
the ache you head in his voice breaks you, and youâre sure he can see the tears threatening to spill, but you stand with your choice. âcan i? i donât really know, to be honest,â you respond, voice soft and low, not quite daring to meet his eyes in case you falter.
the contrast between how you were and how you are kicks him in the gut and he has no one to blame but himself. he doesnât want to, but he can sense where this is going. heâs not stupid, he just⊠doesnât want to believe it.
âplease⊠donât do this?â sae swallows the lump in his throat, the foreign way his heartbeat quickens out of fear stumping him. thereâs probably more he should say, but maybe that just wouldnât be enough anymore. his words canât find him and he canât find it in himself to reach out to you. not when he realises you out of all people hate the most for having to do this.
if you just blindly follow your heart, youâd leap in his arms right now, fuck how soaked he is. because you still love him. you know that, and you think maybe he knows it too, but judging by the perplexed look on his face, he probably doesnât realise it. thatâs why your brain does the deciding for you. it had already made its choice the moment you saw that picture, the moment you saw the headlines on that gossip rag.
âi⊠think we should break up, sae.â
before today, if youâd told yourself that one day, youâd say these words, you wouldnât believe it. but here you are, breaking up with the love of your life.
sae is just standing in front of you, staring at you, the happy picture of the two of you during your second year anniversary hanging on your wall haunting him this very second. the command he gave his assistant to help him get that ring for you sending him into the pits of despair. heâs so stunned he doesnât know what to say or do.
âyouâre⊠serious?â
thereâs no expression in his eyes. theyâre just dull, and dark, and nothing like how youâre used to.
this time, youâre the one trying to force the words out of your mouth, calmly, because youâre afraid that the tears will just spill out. âyouâre⊠youâre the one who told me to be kinder to myself, right?â
sae chuckles softly, helplessly, as he realises you take every word he says to heart.
EIGHT YEARS AGO
it was beyond him why you let yourself be subjected to this. nobody was a saint, but surely you deserved better than to be treated like trash?
sae understood a little of where you were coming from. it was hard to let go of a three-year relationship, but having you visit him crying in the middle of the night wasnât exactly what he would condone.
âyou can do better than him, you know that right?â
the words slipped out of his mouth before he knew it. heâd once sworn that he wouldnât meddle in your relationship, that heâd let you figure it out on your own, but your heartaches were getting too often those days that sae just couldnât hold it in anymore.
it probably wasnât the best thing to say to you, considering how you were bawling your eyes out and staining his entire jersey with your tears, but sae was never one to filter his words.
âeveryone says that.â
which tells sae you didnât believe that.
âwhich means thereâs some truth there,â he sighed, leaning back against the couch as you continued to bury your head in his chest. sae saw rin from the corner of the room, peaking out of the hallway and gave him a quick wave to signal him to leave them alone.
âi⊠donât know what to do.â
you rarely ever did. having been your friend for the past four years before this taught sae two things: one, you gave your all for your relationship, and two, you were one of the kindest people heâs ever known. (and by extension, it simply meant you knew what had to be done, but you refused to do it.)
sae took a deep breath, eyes gazing up at the ceiling before he resumes, âi donât know why you let people treat you like that.â
you stayed quiet, sniffling, though itâs getting softer now, so sae continues.
âyou know, youâre one of the nicest people i know,â sae told you, fingers absentmindedly stroking your hairâthe way he always wanted to but never let himself admit. âwhich is why it kinda sucks that youâre so stupid to let yourself be hurt by that asshole over and over again.â
the both of you chuckled at that. sae was glad to know you understood he meant only well.
âstop⊠letting people hurt you and then letting them get away like that, okay?â he said it softly, but you definitely caught it. âbe kinder to yourself, fucks sake.â
he felt your fingers curl, gripping at his shirt as you stopped yourself from crying. you looked up at him that night, smiling as your tears dried, and sae remembered telling himself that heâd never want to be the reason you had to feel upset.
âwhen you say it like that, how can i say no?â you joked, laughing, wiping the last of your tears away. âbesides, even if i was still being stupid, iâd always have you with me, right?â
sae remembers.
he remembers not answering you, but he remembers thinking yes, always. and he has a feeling you knew back then too, that sae would always be there for you regardless.
only if itâs you.
maybe even back then, you already knew how he felt for you. and you would always listen to him. youâd always believe in him. now he feels even more stupid for everything that transpired. with his words thrown back at him, he finds himself speechless.
âyouâre right,â he replies, voice hoarse, his gaze dropping to the floor. sae was being stupid, and heâs crazy if he thinks heâll be let off that easy.
youâre sniffling a little, and he does you the courtesy of not looking at you even though youâre already turning away. âiâll mail you your stuff.â
âitâs fine, iâll get rin to help me take âem.â
itâs a diplomatic breakup. polite, nothing out of line, just two adults deciding that maybe now just isnât the time.
after a long pause, sae gets the guts to speak. âyou know youâre the only one for me, right?â because he feels like maybe youâd been doubting it recently and he doesnât want you to feel worthless. maybe it has the adverse effect and maybe itâs selfish but he needs you to hear that.
you donât acknowledge it, and you barely acknowledge him, even as he turns to walk out the door. this time, youâre the one not giving the answer, but sae feels like he knows how you feel anyway. you need time away from him. a proper break from him. so sae leaves wordlessly, clinging on to hope that maybe one day, heâll be deserving of you again.
the moment sae closes the door, you fall to the floor, wailing into your cushion pillow, having one of the worst nights of your life.
THE NEXT WEEK
annoying jr [10.48am]: oi stupid, iâm here.
âfollowed by an incessant ringing of your doorbell.
when you groan and swing the front door open, youâre greeted by a smirking rin. at least he hasnât changed one bit since youâd known him when he was a kid. well, at least not to you.
âdid you have to ring it so obnoxiously?â you whine, plopping down on your couch, burying your head in the leather seats.
rin shuts the door behind him, scoffing. âyouâre the one who always used to wake up late,â he quips, rolling his eyes (you donât have to see it, you just know how heâs going to react).
âand someone was always the third party on dates,â you snap back, sticking your tongue out at him.
he deadpans, clicking his tongue in annoyance. âhey, wasnât my fault my stupid brother kept using me as an excuse to go out.â
right, because back then his parents were a lot more strict than they are now, back before they didnât know you.
realising that the mood had grown a little somber, rin clears his throat, changing the subject. âhowâs work so far?â
you chuckle under your breath, finding it funny how both the brothersâ go-to question is to ask about your work. though, theyâve never been that good in conversations so you canât blame them.
âitâs fine, promotion periodâs coming up so iâm preparing for that,â you respond lacklustrely, getting up off the couch, dragging your feet to your bedroom before resurfacing just ten seconds later, carrying a box full of saeâs things.
itâs full of his clothes, care products and the like, but mostly clothes, because youâd realised you liked to steal his jerseys, wear them like theyâre your own, but mostly because they smell like him, remind you of him when heâs not physically around and makes you feel better.
doesnât make you feel good when you have to pack them up, though. you cried all the way again. pathetically. but rin doesnât have to know, so you keep up your unbothered facade.
rin takes the box from you, thankfully not mentioning his brother. âhope you get that promotion then,â he says politely, though you sense he might have something else to say that he doesnât know if he should.
you sigh, because sometimes rin looks like a neglected younger brother and you donât have the heart to ignore him like sae does sometimes. âgo ahead, say whatâs on your mind.â
it takes just a moment of hesitation before rin heeds your words. âdid you see saeâs interview last night?â
part of you doesnât want to think about anything related to sae, but most of you still misses him, so itâs a canon event that you still look out for any and every news of him. itâs sad and pathetic and thatâs why you make extra care not to mention any of that to anyone.
ânope, was it about their recent win?â
you try to go on as per normal, like sae isnât just the love of your life that you still wanted.
âmhm.â rin, at least, doesnât tease you about it. whether he means to or not, youâre grateful for that. âthey asked him, though. about that game.â (but of course, you knew that already.)
ah, that game. the game that he abandoned to come find you. the game that led up to your breakup. the game that sae probably had to pay dearly for for knowingly ditching.
âoh, i see. what about it?â
a resigned sigh leaves rinâs lips as he looks at you with the full sincerity of a younger brother concerned with his older brotherâs fuckup. âhe⊠really loves you, you know? heâs just⊠stupid.â
you snort at his last remark, both of you breaking out into a small laughter. itâs bittersweet, thinking about how this might be the last time you see rin, but youâll probably get over it. youâll get over this, and sae, and move on somedayânow if only you could get yourself to want that.
âi know,â you mutter quietly, deciding that itâs best not to speak too much about it. itâs dumb, considering everything that happened, but his words made you feel relieved, even if just for a second.
just before he leaves, you give him one last hug. âthanks, rin.â
THREE MONTHS LATER
âplease donât give me another heart attack like last time.â
sae huffs, annoyed, although he knows he probably deserves that. his poor assistant went through hell trying to appease everyone on the team due to saeâs last stunt. luckily, there are exceptions made for the best soccer player on the team, so no punishment was dire enough that he had to get kicked.
âiâm just going out for some air.â sae leaves before his assistant can get any words out, entirely too tired today to listen to anything anyone else has to say.
besides, today is a special day.
the moment heâs out of earshot, he calls one of the only contacts on his phone. for some reason, his heart is thumping wildly and his fingers are fiddling with the hem of his windbreaker. the weather is nearing negatives but somehow, he doesnât feel it.
âhello?â
sae nearly gets a heart attack of his own when a deep, low voice is what he hears, until he realises that he recognises it.
ârin, whatâre you doing there?â
he can make out the sadistic chuckle from halfway across the world. âwhat, disappointed?â (if sae could punch him right now he would.) ârelax, weâre just at her birthday dinner and sheâs busy,â he explains, though sae doesnât nearly care about any of that other than the fact that he wants to talk to you.
âwhereâs y/n?â
âsheâs the birthday girl, people are lining up just to take pictures with her,â rin raises his voice over the background, and saeâs never been more frustrated. âsheâs taking pics with some handsome guy right now, and heâs got his hands around her waist,â rin whistles right after, and sae can just sense his smugness through the phone.
whether what his brother said was true or not, sae is in no position to be jealous anyway. (even though he is and heâs sporting an unamused frown thatâs enough to scare the living daylights out of anyone watching him.)
âwish her happy birthday for me then.â
rin snorts. âsure. disappointed you didnât get to hear herââ sae hangs up before he can be subjected to anymore of his brotherâs nonsense. all he really wanted was to just hear your voice, but he wonât be greedy.
staying friends was already a miracle. thatâs only possible because you have a heart of gold, and he knows that if he ever pushes it too much, he might just risk losing you forever and he knows he canât have that. so for now, thisâll do.
heâll wait, no matter how long he has to.
later that night, when the moon is high up in spain, sae receives a notification from you. there, attached in your thread is an audio message.
âitoshi sae⊠thank you.â
the little laugh you leave at the end is enough to make him smile at his phone. he counts his blessings for you, and starts counting down to the days he has left in spain. if he wants you, he needs to go all in.
ONE YEAR LATER
âyou ready yet? iâm at your lobby.â
sae can just barely make out your panicked state from the other line. youâre late, and you know heâs fine with waiting, but because youâre a perfectionist, you really really donât want him to have to.
âyeah, just gimme like, five minutes!â which sae knows translates to i actually need twenty but iâll rush. thereâs a certain satisfaction it gives himâknowing that he knows you in these ways that nobody else can.
âtake your time, i have to pump some gas anyway, running low,â he tells you, an excuse which you accept right away because itâs convenient.
sae doesnât even need any gas. itâs full, so he parks his car by the entrance and waits inside, turning up the air conditioning because he knows youâll be sweating a little by the time you inevitably still choose to rush down.
itâs exactly one year since the last time he wished you happy birthday (through rin). and this year, heâs happy enough he gets to actually take you out. the past yearâs been filled of sae restarting the relationship from ground zeroâback to being friends and gradually coming back again to where you are now, dating. sure, itâs taxing having to do it all over again, but heâd do this however many times you want him to.
SIX MONTHS AGO
âhmmm, i dunno how to feel, i kinda like this.â
sae had been calling you up often, and he feels good inside knowing that you might miss him as much as he misses you.
âkinda like what?â he asked, wishing that he could see your expression right now.
âkinda like you chasing me all over again,â you giggled, shameless with your words. âwhat if i just never agree to be your girlfriend again? what if i just make you chase after me forever?â
he knew for a fact that you werenât that sadistic, but even so, his answer would still be the same. âthen iâll stick in this phase with you. forever.â although that would render the ring that he bought for you useless.
âoh really?â
sae hummed in faux contemplation. ânah, maybe not. maybe iâll just ditch you and run off with ryusei or something.â
he got a laugh out of you for that.
âryusei? not even some other girl, but ryusei?â
sae chuckledâhe still remembered his mistake. and heâd never put you in a position to feel that way again. even if you two were just joking around.
ây/n, thereâs no one else except you.â he was rarely ever serious like this, especially considering how you bantered as friends, but sometimes, he knew he had to. nowadays, more than anything, he just wanted to know that you had no doubts about how he felt for you.
you didnât give any response to that, but considering how you started to ease up around him even more after that, sae felt like maybe there was a solid hope there of reviving this after all.
the knock on his window brings him back into the present, your pretty face doing wonders in lighting up his mood.
as you get into the passenger seat, sae steals a glance at you from head to toeâyouâre so beautiful and so worth the wait and youâll always be.
âso, where are you taking me today, mr itoshi sae?â
he leans back against his seat, tilting his head as he looks at you, feigning contemplation. âdepends, ms l/n y/n, do you trust me?â
you press your lips into a line, the corners threatening to tug upwards. youâre so adorable that saeâs actually going to go insane but he dons a straight face like he always has because letting you know the power you have over him is more than you need to know.
âi think itâd be a little weird if i couldnât trust my boyfriend.â
suddenly itâs like time stands still and saeâs hands are stuck on the steering wheel and heâs left staring into space wondering if he heard you right. boyfriend? he turns around to look at you, teal eyes searching your own for answers but all he sees is a smirk on your faceâyou definitely know the power you have over him.
âwow, want me that bad, huh?â you joke, giggling as you tell him to hit the gas. âi⊠wasnât kidding though.â
and as he pulls out of the parking lot, he thinks about the little velvet box that sits in his jacket pocket, thinks about the fact that heâs one of the luckiest people in the world thanks to you. heat rises to his cheeks, and he has to look away from you.
âyou know one day youâre still gonna be mrs itoshi, right?â
this time, you laughâbut not like you think itâs a joke, more like the kind where you think was there even any other option? and even then, you offer him assurance.
âthereâs nothing i want more.â
FINALLY BSD IN MY FYPPPP
đđ©đŠ đđŠđłđ§đŠđ€đ” đđȘđłđ
ă Youâre such a strange girl
Iâd like to shake you around and around
Youâre such a strange girl
Iâd like to turn you all upside down
Youâre such a strange girl
The way you look like you do
Youâre such a strange girl
I want to be with you ćœĄ
Prologue
Chapter 1: Who is she?
Chapter 2: Toxic
Chapter 3: Meddle About
Chapter 4: coming soon âŠ
â itoshi s. x beauty and the beast
entry one of âsomeday, my prince will comeâ
âbe still!â you snarled at the magenta furred beast. âtch..!â sae scoffed. his large paw shuddered in your grasp as you slowly pulled out the thorn. âit wouldnât hurt to be more gentle with itâŠâ he groaned in pain. oh, god everything felt like agony.
âyou wouldnât be in pain if you hadnât gone to save me. iâm not some damsel in distress.â you sarcastically pointed out, much to saeâs laughter. âuhuh, so you were fine defending yourself from that pack of wolves?â
you glare at him for his comment, and quickly rip the thorn out. âow..! shâ uugh⊠what was that for..?â he pouted, his other paw quickly moving to massage the pained one. âthatâs for being a sarcastic jerk. now go rest up, prince.â you teased.
sae scowled at the nickname. âdonât call me that.â he softly pushed at your waist. âeeehhh, right, right⊠just⊠rest already, sae.â you sigh, standing up. this place⊠wasnât so bad now that you think about it. but you miss your father. how could you not?
sae nods, acknowledging your order. geez⊠one thing sae itoshi really didnât mess with was his health. heâd put away his ego to follow a physicianâs orders. âah, and,â you started.
ââŠthanks for saving me. âi guess⊠i mightâve really died if you hadnât save me.â
your eyes avoided his, bottom lip in a pout. youâre not really used to relying on otherâs to save you. or, maybe itâs more so that you never needed to be saved. itâs not everyday that wolves show up in the province anyways.
ââŠyeah, sure. i was just⊠worried when i heard you decided to run away.â he admits, his voice faltering. âyou wouldnât believe how dangerous these woods have gotten in just a decade.â
ââŠdo you just go around patrolling the woods like some guard?â you stifle a laugh. the beast can only deadpan at you. âdo you think i just stay in my palace all day? i still need to exercise.â he scoffs.
âtemper.â the candlestick known as aiku warns. âremember, be nice.â he smiles.
the next few days are⊠surprisingly pleasant. as sae recovers from his scars, youâve consistently been tending to his wounds as well as making decent company. decent, since youâre the only company heâs had in a while.
âcan you walk?â your arm supports his lower back as the two of you walk in the snow. âiâiâm fine. iâm not some grandmother with arthritis, iâm only 20.â he huffs, that once cold look in his eyes much more gentle.
âhah! only 20? you might as well be a grandpa!â you tease, much to saeâs dismay. âso what? youâre probably turning 20 in a couple months. whoâs gonna be the old geezer now?â he raised an eyebrow. his breath visible in the air as a white cloud.
ââŠyou. itâs always gonna be you, oldie.â you grinned, throwing a snowball suddenly in his direction.
the snow fell off his face, some of it melting and being absorbed into his magenta fur from his pure body heat.
sae frowned, unamused, as his large dug to gather the largest snowball he could manage to create. âiâm going to destroy you.â he muttered, aiming in your direction.
âsaeâ! donât! i have so much to live for!â you laughed as you ran away from him, hiding behind a tree. âcome back here⊠iâm gonna teach you a lesson..!â he ran, following your each and every move.
the two of you played as if two little children. the kingdomâs unfavored, blunt prince, and the oddball daughter of a kooky mechanic from a quaint village. who would have thought that theyâd make such a dynamic duo?
some might even call them a power couple..?
âah! just a few more days, and weâll be human again!â the miniature grandfatherâs clock cheered. âoh yeah? what makes you so sure, sendou?â aiku hummed, looking down at the sight in the courtyard.
âwhat makes me sure? why, the master hasnât ever done this! sheâs made him different!â he exasperatedly exclaimed, going on a tangent about how heâs going to woo the maidâs staff once again using the boyish charm he had lost.
aiku nodded, seeing the look in saeâs eyes. the same look the young master had when he had proclaimed to become the best king in the world as a child; the look of hope. however this time, it runs deeper. how sae lets you guide his paw as he relearns how to use a quill. it was something he was too prideful to even let his childhood tutors do.
âhmm⊠maybe youâre right, sendou. there might be something there that wasnât there before.â