Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
Just as he predicted, things were different. All the smiles and kind words towards him felt like lies and mocking pity. Midoriya hated it. He hated his friends, (except for Kirishima, the stupid redhead, who didn’t try to give him any pity and had even offered to smack him in the face) and he hated his teachers, (except for all might) and he hated the villains, and he especially hated whoever hade spilled his secret to all the world. He was going to kill them. He was just, inches away from hunting the reporter down and breaking his nose.
Nightmares didn’t help his mood at all, they were filled with, not only people screaming at him to give up his dream, but had villains whispering dark things, even asking (ordering) him to join them. The only thing that made things better was Kota's thank you note.
Everyone who watched the news now knew that he had been quirkless for most of his life. Midoriya was embarrassed and didn’t want to see how his classmates reacted to that. It was a big shocker. it had been his deepest, darkest secret beside one for all. Bakugo had known but hadn't told anyone, and Midoriya owned him for that. (Well, now after saving him from being kidnapped, they were even. but still)
In his mind's eye, Midoriya could imagine all his friends being disgusted of or even worse, pitying him. He didn’t want them to leave him, but then he told himself that he didn’t care, and it didn’t matter. He knew that he was lying to himself. Midoryia just didn't want them to think of him any different.
Have you read multi-chapter fanfic and you kudos it cus it's good but then the author posts something that ruins it and you're all like "I need that kudos back, thanks"
I guess the thing is I have been betrayed by fanfics, and I wish I had the power to take my kudos back
You Are a Monster, as Am I
pairings: f!reader x naoya
word count: 8.1k
contains: sorcerer!reader, strong-willed f!reader, unfulfilled arranged marriage, childhood enemies to present enemies, angst, events spanning from childhood to present day, proper characterizations, physical brawls (between naoya and reader), conflicted romance, unrequited love (for naoya), parental issues (naoya and reader), eventual love confessions, a single bittersweet kiss, flowery writing
warnings: contains spoilers and canon events, implied/referenced physical abuse (inflicted on naoya and reader), misogyny, violence
a/n: a lot of love and labor went into this fic, so reblogs, comments, likes, etc. are more than appreciated! also a kind thank you to @suguruwrx who reblogged the unfinished version of this and gave me the motivation to continue :) I hope you enjoy
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The Moon shed Her tears for you, glinting among the stars. It is only She who witnessed your crimes.
Two men had lain in the snow at your feet; one still, the other pressing his hands together in prayer. Blood, warm and wet, soiled your clothing and clumped your hair. It was not yours.
Get away, the man croaked, red dribbling from the corner of his lips like a feral hound. His eyes brimmed with salted tears.
At your back, the city was quiet, waiting with bated breath for your final hand. You fetched a coin from the muddied ice and the metal bit against your palm; it was one of many scattered around their bodies.
Devil, he said. Demon, he wailed.
You were but a child, and the Moon may forgive you.
The man was left for the snow as you ran and the wind nipped at your heels. Your mother had choked for breath when you stepped into the threshold of your home, a broken lip and a dirtied coat.
What did you do? she had rasped. You had mistaken it for a mother’s worry.
You held the coin out for her, a droplet of silver against your skin. It fell to the wooden floors and your trembling hand bore itself empty, but it remained reaching out for her. You might have looked as if you were begging, pleading with this woman and her severe face. Forgiveness, mercy, you should have asked.
Stupid girl, she said, what did you do?
I had to, you cried.
Your father had interceded then; fatigued eyes, skin not yet worn with age but battle. You remember little.
He left that night and did not return until the dawn.
It’s been taken care of, he told you, and your mother made a sound of distaste in her throat.
You will not be the burden of this family, she said, and did not speak again.
-----
A year flitted through your grasp like a writhing serpent, it bit your arm and curled the pulse of your wrist. All was forgotten, if not nothing but a dreadful reverie. Your father had done well to wash his hands of the blood you spilt, though it continued to stain your own skin.
“You will behave,” your mother tugged firmly at the tresses of your hair, “and you will be proper.” A lovely comb of pearl adorned your head, placed by an unkind hand.
We are leaving to meet a very important family, she had said as she ushered you to bathe when you awoke. Do not make a fool of your father and I.
A driver had arrived, the sleek vehicle churning the stones of the road as a prized stallion might.
Seated in its leather interior, your mother propped her knees toward you and inclined her head, “You must remember these names; do not forget them.” Her voice was low, spoken on a whisper. The car jostled, and she took your hand in her own. “Naobito Zen’in—” she said and traced the name into the supple of your palm.
Her brows raised expectantly.
“Naobito Zen’in,” you repeated.
“—is the Head of the Zen’in Clan,” she continued.
And it went on until each name had been placed in your hand and repeated from your tongue. She told you of their positions in the clan, their accomplishments as Zen’in-blooded men.
“Jinichi will have two scars along his forehead,” she said, eyes flitting to your father, quiet where he sat, “and Ogi will be the man with long and dark hair.”
“Must you continue that?” your father asked, displeasure in his words.
“She needs to be prepared.”
“Certainly,” he scathed, “for your own betterment.”
Ten years of age, and you had not understood. Your stiffened clothing and painted face, your father’s reluctant anger and your mother’s desperation.
The vehicle had slowed before a courtyard. Women milled about, attending to the gardens as their children squealed and caught their mothers’ skirts; their pruning shears poised to nip the stem of a bud before they stilled.
“Come along,” your mother spoke as she stepped out of the vehicle. You trailed obediently, clutching her hand; your father walked ahead, his haori billowing, an angered sail on a ship’s mast.
A single man stood at the doors of the household, polite greetings exchanged before he offered his guidance through the foyer and down a left hall. Your mother’s hand, clasped within your own, lifted to tap beneath your chin.
“Up,” she mouthed.
The man gestured to an open threshold and your father inclined his head before stepping into the room. A table had been set, its bare wood offering rich tea and delicate foods. At its head sat a tall man, the greyed whiskers of his face inciting your mother’s words, Naobito Zen’in. To his right was the scarred man, Jinichi; opposite him was Ogi, tapping the stem of his spoon on the cup’s lip.
A boy with dark hair that laid across his brow had been seated at Jinichi’s side. He was young, his features plump with youth, though his eyes—a burnished bronze—betrayed that juvenility.
“Please,” Naobito said, motioning a calloused hand, “sit and join us.” The other men did not offer their niceties; they did not believe it necessary.
Your mother bowed at her waist, as did your father and you, before settling on the feather-down pillions; you did not meet the boy’s strange eyes when your mother’s hand guided you to the seat beside his.
Naobito sighed greatly, “Speak, and be quick about it.”
“Are we not here to discuss the arrangement?” your father asked, carefully spoken.
“Ah, yes, that’s correct.” A furrow carved itself in the middle of his mottled forehead. He had not truly forgotten. “You claimed the girl is strong in her cursed energy?”
“She is.”
“And what of it?”
“It is a form of transfiguration, somewhere along a similar vein.”
“How vague.” Naobito rapped the pad of his finger against the table.
“I apologize. We’re uncertain of what she possesses specifically, and have been unable to seek answers from those we had hoped would have them.”
A ribbon of steam ebbed from the tea placed in front of you. Clothing rustled from the boy as he reached for a small platter of confections and brought a flaked pastry to his mouth. Your hands, interlaced within one another, rested atop your lap. You should not fiddle, it proved bad manners, but a hem of worry draped your throat.
The men had continued on. Dowries, they spoke of; you did not know this word. Spearheads and blades, your father said. Coin, Jinichi asked. Your mother remained unspeaking. Porcelain rasped along the table as the boy nudged the plate away, and toward you. He did not look to you, to see if you may take his offer.
Sugared fruits and honeyed cakes had been placed delicately on the etched platter, garnishes of petals and leaves tucked between cream and custards; though, where the boy had taken his confectionery, the arrangement had collapsed. You plucked a tartlet into your hand, soft as a lamb’s ear, and returned the dish to the center of the table.
“It is decided, then?”
“Yes,” your father said, “it is decided.”
Naobito hummed, “Come here, girl.” A hand beckoned for you.
And when you rose, settling at the man’s side with legs tucked beneath you, he took your chin in his hold.
“Her abilities matter little—her features will be more than enough to suffice,” Naobito said. He pressed a thumb to the fat of your cheek, you remembered it hurt when he did so. “You will make a fine wife for Naoya.”
-----
A betrothal of prospect; a vow of heavy coffers and prestige. In exchange for your hand to bear their ring.
“That is all you must do,” your mother said, catching the tears that wet your lashes, “and make the boy happy.”
You had cried terribly, trembling like the fletch of a loosed arrow.
“You will live here, and you will be grateful.” Her harrowing words cloaked in a soft voice.
The poverty that afflicted your family, your mother’s need for a lick of notability; you did not know of these things as a child, and it would reap foul consequences.
“Your father and I will come to visit on the third of every month,” she said. You crumpled her gown in fistfuls, holding her sleeve as if to keep her there with you. It was not your mother who tore your hands from her bodice, but a servant woman; her name was Yuhara, and you would soon learn this when she clutched you tightly, lovingly, pitifully, as your mother and father left in that forsaken vehicle.
Yuhara, beautiful and kind, had led you to your rooms as she smoothed your hair.
“All of this is yours,” she said, and she smiled.
No, you thought, it can’t be. You did not speak.
For days upon days you kept to those strange rooms. Yuhara visited to offer meals that you did not eat; you did not bathe, you did not move unless to relieve yourself. A different servant woman tried her hand each morn to dress you, to coo their commiserations, but you did not care.
One month had slipped between your outstretched fingers, then two. Twice, your parents had returned, and twice did you cry. The women did not come to your rooms anymore, they had stopped long ago.
Your surprise was palpable when a curt knock came from your door.
“May I come in?” A boy’s voice, broken with adolescence.
You rose from a chaise by the windows to receive him. Naoya, his name was.
“My father wanted me to see to you,” he said.
“I’m fine.”
His mouth thinned, this annoyed him. “You’re lying.” He stood with a straightened back, a stance that demanded subservience. For a child, he held himself as a man might.
And he was right, you did not want to tell him the truth. “No,” you shook your head, and your hand twisted the brass knob idly, “I’m not lying.”
“The women are saying that you’re sad and won’t eat,” divulged Naoya. He paused then, a gauging expression on his round face, before rifling through his pockets. “And my father isn’t happy, he says you’re becoming a burden.”
You averted your eyes from Naoya in shame, a frown on your lips.
“Here,” he said, “it’s from the gardens.” He had tugged a ripened apple into his palm, holding it out for you.
Naoya had been kinder then, you remembered, even in its brevity.
-----
You were kept separate as children, only seeing one another when you ate your meals. However, Yuhara and the other mothers had a tendency to usher you around the grounds. They taught you to mend stitchings, to wash the linens; they placed your hands on soil and showed you how to garden; they encouraged your studies of language and art and sorcery.
The women did as they were told, and you did as they told you.
At the age of eleven did your docility waver. The mothers began to chastise when you scurried away from your duties, or mouthed rudely. Once did one of the women, Hatake, raise her hand at you; the puckered mark remained for two days.
Your parents continued to visit, though it grew to be less often. You did not cry when they sat opposite you at a table, as if strangers, to ask of your well-being. They would smooth your hair and kiss your forehead, and you would let them.
The following year is when the women began to fret; you had yet to have your first bleed.
“If she cannot bear children,” said Naobito from within the separated room, “she’s no better for use than a servant.”
There was a pause, then, “She’s still young, she’s still growing. I beg of you to give her time,” implored Yuhara.
“There is no time to give. The girl will either have it or she won’t.”
“And what then?” Yuhara asked, a tone of bother to her inquiry.
Naobito sniffed. “Do you care for this child?”
You pressed your small ear to the wall, listening diligently, shoulder aching.
“Of course, I care for her.”
“Then she’ll become your obligation if she cannot produce an heir.”
And Yuhara stumbled. She could not formulate an appropriate response at the shift in blame.
Naobito said, “Speak out of turn again and the consequences will be far greater than a damned child.”
You bled at thirteen.
-----
Naoya did not know you. It was evident in his false expectations and strange conversation. On the day you wore a blue dress, sitting for a meal, Naoya lifted his chin toward you, a youthful gesture.
“Do you like the color blue?” he asked.
You peered at the sleeves extending to your wrists, “Not this one. It’s too bright.”
He paused, regarding you. Naoya did not speak for the remainder of that supper.
Naoya did not know you, and no one would tell a word.
“She avoids me,” he complained to his father many days. “She’s boring. She doesn’t talk. I’m sure she’d rather be in the courtyards with the other women.”
“And she’s to be your wife,” Naobito would say with little pity. “Whatever will you do, my son?”
Naoya was brash and rude. He criticized where a compliment was due, he remarked disdainfully on others when he should have remained quiet. He was a boy grown into his tenured throne.
Though, it was a bloodied right to hold.
He was often hit when he was younger: a benign slap to his wrist, or a merciful grabbing of his arm. With age came the yellowed bruising and flitting eyes. He lied for ridiculous things, and became angry when he was not right. He trained until the mud lapped at his heels, until he simply could not breathe; and then he would laugh, a breathless and hoarse sound.
And Naoya grew to be a monster.
-----
You were running in the forest when Naoya found you, just shy of seventeen years of age then. You were running from him.
And your chest hurt, your legs constricted, tightened. You were dampened with sweat, panting as you picked your way quickly along the root-ridden ground. You knew that he was not far behind. But you were tired and scared; you could not marry this boy, you could not live at his side for much longer.
A rough hand pulled you from your desperate path and kept you against a tree. You gasped in pain at the impact of bone against bark. And Naoya was upon you, his shoulders rising and falling in an uneven rhythm.
It was you who laughed now, soft and harrowing.
“Hello, Naoya,” you murmured, your head bowing back to rest on the tree. “Ever the dutiful son.”
His expression twitched and spasmed in restrained ire. For all he prided himself on his composure, it could be so easily broken.
“You’re running from here.” It was a statement, not a question.
“From here,” you said. “From you.”
His mouth thinned. Distantly, you remembered the habit from his childhood; you wondered how you wound up here.
Naoya shook his head. “You’re a fool. You’re a fucking fool.”
“I don’t think I am.” His fingers pressed into either of your shoulders, keeping you still when you began to writhe.
He dipped his chin, tilted his head—he was following your sporadic jerking, wanting you to look him in the eyes when he spoke. “You have everything here. You are given more than the other women simply for being betrothed to me. Is that not enough for you? Could you really need more?”
You remembered this moment well. The beginnings of an end.
“Let me go, Naoya. Let me go and your father will just replace me.” His nostrils flared gently, he was very close. “I’m sure he’ll find you a prettier wife, and she’ll learn to love you.”
“Is that what you’ve done?” The forest was dark, and the Moon bore witness once more. “Learned to love me?”
You sighed, smiling. “I could never love you.”
And you learned to be a monster, just as him.
That night in the forest had been the cusp to an edge. You fought brutally with him, a scuffle of choking palms and thin cuts; Naoya won eventually, sitting atop your abdomen to pin you.
“Stop,” he had hissed, holding your wrists somewhere above your head. “Just stop it.”
Neither of you had utilized jujutsu techniques. You considered it a mercy.
-----
At your behest, you changed rooms, picking larger living quarters near Naoya’s. Yuhara had been surprised to hear such a request, but divvied the necessary orders.
These rooms were broader, emptier, with an expanse of windows along one wall. Word reached Naoya quickly and soon he was standing at your new threshold.
“What are you doing?” he asked, long arms folded across his chest. An angry red line remained at his cheek from where you had scratched him the week prior. There was a matching graze on your collarbone from him as well.
“I was tired of my old rooms, and no one’s using these.”
He hummed, keeping at the doorway instead of slating inward. “This is permanent, then?”
“For now.”
Naoya nodded once, a curt thing, before he left. And you thought of what one of the mothers had told you long ago: Learn thy enemy, child, and do not look away.
You scarcely spoke with one another, despite your living in the Zen’in estates for seven years, and kept mainly to menial dinner conversations, even the occasional passing remark. The plighted man and woman, already estranged.
At eighteen did Naoya change. He completed his studies at the jujutsu academy; he became ranked as a special-grade sorcerer. He grew in mindset and strength. Oddly enough, however, you often saw him more.
And Naoya would sometimes accompany you around the estate; silently, he would walk by your side.
“Do you need something?” you asked him one morning, lifting your heavy garments as you stepped over stones.
He motioned toward the book tucked beneath your arm. “You were reading?”
“I was, yes.”
Naoya hummed. “A bit boring, isn’t it?”
You stopped, turned on a heel, “Do you need something?” you asked again. “You make terrible company.”
His hair was blond then, the color beginning from the roots and peddling into his natural hue. “You’re quite rude today. Have I angered you?”
“No. Would you like to?” You smiled thinly. The narrowing of your eyes could be mistaken for genuine creasing simply enough, but Naoya knew otherwise.
“I have nothing better to do.”
“Wonderful.”
He continued on the old path, and you trailed behind, irritated.
It is strange, this memory. When you grew older is when Naoya would tell you many things: he would tell you about this moment, and he would recite it from his own perspective. It would be so very different from yours.
There had been a river, flowing and beautiful, on the edge of the estate acreage. Naoya walked there without thought, clasping a hand over his wrist behind his back. “Have you been this way before?”
You gave pause, peering around the forest. “Yes,” you said, “when I tried to run. And then you stopped me.”
Naoya stilled, looking at you from his peripheral. You did not see his eyes flicker away.
“I’ve been here many times before that, too. The mothers would bring me here, along with their own children. We would play in the river when it got hot.” You faced him slightly, “I asked you once to join us when we were younger, and you made a face at me.”
He frowned in thought, bending down to pick up a river stone. “I don’t remember that.”
You watched as he skid the flat stone on the water’s surface. It deflected twelve times. “Of course you don’t. At that age, nothing matters all too much for you to want to remember.”
“But you did.” He threw another stone. This one only lasted eleven ricochets.
Your brows lifted plaintively. “I remember because I was upset afterwards.” The river trickled on, a wary wind swept at your hair. “You can’t begin to imagine what it was like for me here, Naoya. I was a child when my parents offered me to your family; the mothers were kind enough, but their children ostracized me when the women turned their backs to us.” Your tone held a biting stance, nipping at his ears.
Naoya did not speak, so you continued.
“I had thought that you, of all the people in this damned estate, might have had a bit of sympathy to spare back then.” You made your steps toward him, coming to stand at his right. “I had thought that we were going to share the burden of this fucking marriage. I see now that I was wrong.”
He bristled, smoothing a thumb along another stone in his hand. “Do you really want to have this conversation?” You could not place the manner of his words.
“It’s been eight years. Should we wait another?”
“I think you should learn to hold your tongue for longer.”
You whirled on him, clutching the fabric at his throat in your fist and bringing him down toward you; Naoya held tightly to your arm, squeezing until you thought he might break the bone.
“What will you do?” he breathed, indolent and amused. “You can’t kill me.”
When you twisted the white cloth, pressing into his trachea, Naoya only grasped harder to you. He was allowing you to do this, you knew. He wanted to entertain whatever you may do.
“You’re beginning to look like your father, Naoya.”
-----
At night is when you walked the estate halls. It was quiet, and the sun was not so blinding when it tucked beneath the horizon. You moved a wooden door and sidled outside; autumn would soon come, the cold wind said.
A mottle-colored cat grazed its thick fur at your ankles in greeting. The cat was Naoya’s favored animal of the estate, who often curled at his feet and slept. You smoothed the animal’s fur with a kind touch and continued onward.
There was a small niche between a copse of trees somewhere east of the estate lands; you had found the hidden courtyard at a young age, abandoned and forgotten, before silently claiming it as your own.
When you would return to the estates many years from now, fevered with rage, the courtyard will have been the only area of the lands left untouched from the wreckage.
It was in that courtyard that you practiced, alone. You had watched the men and their sons train enough that you memorized their incessant patterns. They were fond of continuity and repetition. You learned to be the opposite.
Your father had been partially correct in assuming your jujutsu technique: transfiguration. But it was a technique specified solely to curses. You could not replicate another person; you could not transcribe the color of their hair or the bend of their nose to your body. Though, you could sharpen your teeth like the curse beneath the stone bridge, lengthen claw-tips like the creature that loitered in the eye’s peripheral.
And you practiced such in that courtyard. Until your scleras were blackened, horns peering from beneath your hair, leathered wings retracting at your shoulder blades. It was hideous, how your body shivered and roiled. You often vomited when you ingested the blood of the curses to take their attributes; it was an acrid taste, rotting, festering on your tongue.
You kept the vials of collected blood beneath a flagstone in the courtyard, in a pocket of soil you had dug. And when you lifted the moss-infested stone, you went painfully still. The vials were not there. Frantically, you tore at the soil.
“No,” you hissed. “No, no, no.”
A scrape of a shoe against rock had you reeling around suddenly. Naoya stood at the outskirts of the courtyard, and held up the glass fixtures between his fingers.
“You have very odd night habits,” he said, looking curiously at the collected blood. “I’ve been paying attention.”
Your heart beat heavily in your chest, pressing against your lungs. You primed indifference onto your features. “You only pay attention to what suits you at the moment.”
He hummed, then sniffed in ire. “Yes, I do.”
Truly, you did not have much to say.
Naoya was silent a moment, then, “Why do you have these?”
“Blood is best for the roses,” you said sensibly. “And better to be stored away somewhere safe.”
“It’s almost autumn. The roses are dying.”
“They can be saved.”
“Can they?” He swirled the blood idly, coming closer to you as he did so. “You cannot cheat what death deals. It’s unnatural.”
“It’s only hen’s blood. Yuhara brings it back when she goes into town for the butcher.”
Naoya tugged the cork stopper from the vial. “I suppose this is quite useless then.” He lifted the glass, tipping it above a cropping of grass. He paused.
You had been watching the blood dribble to the edge, and he had been watching you.
“You’re just going to let me do this? I thought you were more dignified than that.” He clicked his tongue.
A furrow etched itself between your brows, a twitch rose beneath your eye. “It’s hen’s blood—it matters little to me.”
“Oh, don’t play stupid. Did you think I wouldn’t figure out what you’ve been doing? Do you think I don’t know what this is?”
You paled, your lips parting in unease. You wondered, briefly, how this conversation might end. You wondered, distantly, what Naoya might do.
“Show me.”
You swallowed, a stiff sound. “What?”
“Show me your technique, I want to see it.” He offered you the vials now. “I’ve always wanted to know how a transfiguration one worked.”
You did not yield a step when Naoya neared. “It’s not transfiguration.” A lie.
“No?”
“No.”
He sucked on his teeth. “I remember when you first came here, your father said it was something similar to transfiguration, but no one knew exactly what.” Naoya pocketed all but one vial, “So, let’s not be quick to lie.”
You had seen Naoya use his technique many times, but this had been different somehow. He was standing before you, then abruptly behind you as he curled a hand beneath your jaw. He scarcely moved when you plunged an elbow into his abdomen, only groaning lowly, tightening his hold on you, anticipating your attempt to shatter his nose against the crown of your head.
“Easy,” he cooed as one might a spooked horse, breathless and with a smile to his voice. Naoya forced your mouth open, his fingers digging into the junction of your jaw. He poured the blood down your throat as you coughed and thrashed violently; Naoya closed your mouth when the vile was empty, clasping a palm over your lips. And you gagged, your body tensing and wanting to curl in on itself, but Naoya kept you against him until he felt you swallow.
He let you go, let you stumble to the flagstones. Naoya was waiting.
“You bitch,” you heaved, and red dribbled from your lips to smatter below you. “You stupid fucking bitch.”
You could sense Naoya watching you as he said: “You have an absolutely foul mouth.”
When you turned, peering over a shoulder to him, you laughed. And you laughed. And you laughed as you crawled to your feet and faced him. You were twitching grotesquely, moving perversely. Long points of teeth pricked at your lips, your pupils constricted and dilated, your flesh turned ashen, and dark blood dripped from your eyes. You were a monster.
Naoya believed this was the effect of a full vial, but you had not taken it in its entirety; the majority of the cursed blood was left on the stones, on your clothing, smeared on Naoya’s hands. A complete vial would be enough to kill, though he could not have known.
His expression was that of delight and utter horror.
You surged forward. Naoya did not maneuver quickly enough.
Your talon caught the meat of his arm, sliced it, and Naoya stifled his cry of pain.
You wanted to feel his blood again, you thought, you wanted to cut his throat. You did not care if the mothers heard, if Naobito listened to the sounds of a dying son. You were angry, raging, roiling with madness.
This estate that took your hand, kissed your palm, and asked of you to stay where it would always be safe. These people who clothed you, fed you, and claimed that you should be a grateful woman. And Naoya…oh, Naoya.
The boy who had been promised excellence and did not understand that promise held such little weight. The child who grew to be a terrible boy, a worse man. You were still so young then, only nineteen, as was he. You wondered if it might have happened differently, if you would want it to.
And then he was upon you once more, raising his hands to fists, bracing his lower body. “Father would never tell me about your technique,” he said fervently, reaching for your shoulder. “I always wondered why.”
You avoided his touch, moving to splice the skin at his face; he did not let you get close enough. It was an unusual parry, whereas you fought to kill, Naoya fought to irritate. He enjoyed watching your features transform, mutilate themselves into something entirely new.
At one point did he stumble on a deep groove of a rock. The front of his clothing tore beneath your blackened nails, wanting to pierce his heart. It was a lucky fall, you supposed, until you were atop him, a hand to his neck and talon-ends causing the flesh to give way.
You were reminded of when you had tried to run from this place, and Naoya had debilitated you in a similar manner.
“You won’t do it,” he whispered, as if he knew all. His bronze eyes were alight beneath you.
Pricks of blood wept from his throat. Naoya winced.
“I hate you,” you rasped, “I hate you, Naoya. And I will make you want to slit your own throat by the end of it.”
He shifted, and you felt his chest rise and fall heavily. “We’re set to marry in a week. Don’t be rash.”
You shook your head, a sudden scoff. And when you made to speak, another voice filled in your stead.
“That is quite enough.”
Naobito Zen’in stepped into the courtyard, the moonlight spilling on him. Your body remained taut, poised over his son; you did not let go.
“If you wish to kill him,” Naobito began, “by all means, do so. No son of mine would be bested by a woman—his betrothed, nonetheless.” There was disgust, disappointment, to his words.
You smiled, and vomited the cursed blood onto the flagstones.
-----
You were not left unattended for the remainder of the week.
Naobito kept one of the men with you, a large and brute thing, he had a thin scar at the corner of his mouth. He had been introduced as ‘Toji,’ before Naobito made his leave and gave little explanation.
Toji did not speak often; he held a palm to the pommel of his sword and let his eyes wander about. And on one early morning, when you had been pruning a dead hydrangea bush, you leaned close to Yuhara and asked, “Is he always like this?”
Yuhara paused, nipping a root thoughtfully. “He’s strange,” she settled on. “Every family needs their pariah.”
Your expression pinched in question. She sighed gently from her nose.
“He’s not your enemy, if that’s what you’re wanting to know. He’s far from it.”
You gathered fallen leaves at leisure, a collection of reds and golds. “Naobito’s making him keep watch over me.” Toji was sitting by a veranda, twirling a blade in his hands.
Yuhara turned, the etchings of her skin deepening, “What happened?”
After you returned to the household the previous night, unrestrained, with Naoya and Naobito, the latter had struck you across the face, wholly apathetic. “If you can’t discipline your own wife, allow me to do so,” Naobito had seethed to his son. Then he looked to you, “Do not speak of this to anyone, lest you want to be truly punished.”
A thorn nicked the pad of your finger and you startled. “Nothing happened. Just precautions for the wedding, I guess.”
The following night, Toji walked you silently to your rooms after supper. You were watching your slippered feet step in front of you when Toji cleared his throat.
“You’re set to be Naoya’s wife?”
You lifted your head then, swallowing unsurely. “Yes.” For now, you wanted to tell him.
Toji hummed, “I’m very sorry.”
It was all he said.
-----
Naoya was staring at you.
You glanced up from the tea you held, now watching him as well.
You let yourself think, for a brief moment, what it might have been like if he were a different man, and you, a different woman. Another man would surely be eager to touch his wife, kiss her gently; another woman would be smiling, holding her lover’s hand.
Tomorrow would be the wedding.
And you would not be there.
Naoya raised a brow, a question, as if to ask: ‘What?’
You sniffed indolently. ‘Nothing.’
“Are you listening?” Yuhara chided you.
When you blinked, now facing Yuhara, Naoya remained surveying you. “Yes,” you said. “Yes, I’m listening.”
At the large table sat Naobito, Jinichi, Ogi, your mother and father, and a few other decently regarded women—Yuhara among them. They spoke of how the wedding would proceed, the tie officiated between the Zen’in clan and your family.
You stopped listening once they reached conversation of the ceremony.
-----
Again, in the beginnings of dawn, did Toji speak once more on the path to your rooms.
“You’re going to run tonight, aren’t you?” He stood at the threshold of your rooms, tilting his head at your retreating back. Toji heeded how you stiffened before you turned.
“No.” Resolute; a lie.
He scoffed, and then he smiled amusedly. “I know how this goes. You run for it when everyone’s too busy to bother with you.”
“You’re very observant, but I don’t intend on doing such.”
Toji frowned in thought. “And you’re a good liar. Did you learn that from Naoya?”
“No.” Yes.
“Well,” Toji said, “you seem intent on being well-behaved.” He sounded to be mocking you.
Your features were guarded as he continued, leaning his heavy shoulder to the door jamb.
Toji gestured a hand lazily to the columns of windows behind you, “Shame those don’t open, the weather’s real nice tonight. But I’m sure someone will keep a side entrance unlocked to let the breeze through the house.”
“Yes,” you said carefully, “what a shame.”
-----
Toji was not in the hallway when you opened your door late in the night. You tugged at the satchel on your shoulder, becoming another terrible little creature to roam under the light of the moon. All was quiet and still in the Zen’in estates.
For the past hours, you had deliberated between two evils; you found that you would prefer the risk of a betrayal from Toji than wed Naoya. So, you ran.
You were nothing but an old ghost in that dreadful house. Your feet did not make a sound, you scarcely breathed; you were not alive that night, a dead man slating from the noose already tied about his neck.
There was a side door, unlatched and ajar. You waited in the alcove down the hall, watching the door to see if someone would emerge. No one did so. And it was easy to slip through the threshold.
Then there were the bodies of many men—propped on the stone wall, left on the ground—who had been stationed to guard just outside the entrance. Their throats had been cut, eyes pressed out of sockets, limbs only tethered by bits of sinew and muscle.
You kept running.
-----
In the Zen’in estates, Toji Zen’in walked idly through the halls for your bedroom. You would surely be gone. He held a hand to his side, staunching a wound from one of the men’s blades. Soon, Naoya and the others would begin to search for you once the sun rose.
And he waited in that bedroom, his blood staining your sheets, wondering what he might do.
-----
Naoya Zen’in woke suddenly. His eyes shifted, hands clambering for the linens. Quickly, he dressed and made for your rooms; he felt something was wrong.
He found the blood first, stippled along the wooden floorboards, growing in frequency toward your rooms. Naoya ran for your door then, his feet slipping along the blood, pushing it into the deep crevices and nicks of the floors.
His hair laid at his brow, boyish and tousled from sleep; his skin was pallid in the moonlight. Naoya plunged into your rooms, frenzied, wild-eyed.
“Oh. You’re early.”
Toji sat lazily on your bed, a dry pride to his stature.
“Where is she?” Naoya breathed. “Where is she?” He was moving toward Toji, unadulterated rage ushering his body forward.
As Naoya lifted his hands, Toji lifted himself from the bed.
“What did you do?” His hands had begun twitching, curling as he hedged around Toji. It was then that he saw the light stain of red on your sheets. The first assault he delivered to Toji was with little warning, the other man stumbling, touching the broken skin of his cheek. “Did you fuck her?” Naoya seethed.
Toji frowned, looking to the sheets and to Naoya. He seemed to ponder this before he said, “Yes.”
Naoya attacked once more, though Toji moved quickly, using Naoya’s momentum to dispel him to the side. It was a vicious, short fight; fists raising and fast parries until Naoya caught Toji’s side. He pulled his hand away, watching the other man crumple in pain. Naoya peered down to his bloodied knuckles, giving pause.
The blood on your sheets was Toji’s. It was not yours.
“You liar.”
-----
Wings beat heavily at your back, a grotesque making of sharp bones and stretched cartilage. You had taken the blood of a curse with such features, slipping it into your throat. But your body was a cumbrous weight to carry, and you were beginning to tire.
The sky was cloud-ridden this night, no moon to guide by light. You felt your wings loosen their muscles, near blundering from the sky, before you righted yourself. An odd feeling encompassed you, a dreary haze of sorts that stuck its fingers into your ears and closed your eyes. It was not fatigue.
A terrible pain came next. It ripped through your wing and was left suspended in the cartilage: a hunter’s arrow. You cried out, gasping for breath as you fell; the brambles and boughs wound around your body when you plummeted, the hardened dirt catching you unkindly.
You clawed at the ground in your stupor, wanting to get up, needing to get away. There was a foot being pushed to your back, keeping you in place. They tore the arrow from your wing and you screamed; it was a weak sound, hoarse and broken. You could not stop them when they sliced the arrow’s blade through your other wing, pinning you to the forest floor.
Tears dripped from your cheeks to the moss beneath you, mud pilled beneath your nails. You were the rain of this forest, a creature of this forest.
You had been so close.
A hand, unfamiliar, tore your head upward as someone knelt down. Naobito Zen’in hummed in thought, wanting you to look at him.
“You are a very stupid girl,” he said, smiling wryly. “And you thought me the fool.” He let your tears run over his hands. “You would have been given everything.”
Naoya had told you something similar once. That was so long ago.
Your unpinned wing flailed violently, hooking the curved bone at the apex into the roots and stones.
“You should learn,” Naobito pressed his fingers into your face, and it hurt when he did so, “when to stop fighting.”
You were screaming again, thrashing wildly for Naobito to step back. The wings would not retract for some time.
“I trust you can take care of this, Naoya.”
A maddened stillness took hold of your body when you heard his name. Naoya drew up beside you, walking carefully. He was staring again, you could not see those burnished eyes, but you understood where they moved. From your spasming wing, to the wound created by the arrowhead, to the other wing pierced through.
You were panting shallowly, trembling from the pain, the cold. Naoya stood in front of you. And when you looked up, he found you. There was a bow slung over his chest. You collapsed once more, your temple pressed against the dirt.
You hated this memory, as you did most.
“Leave us,” said Naoya. Many sets of feet shuffled with purpose. There had been more men, then.
They soon left, and Naoya and you were alone in that forest. He removed the bow.
He leaned down, bringing a hand to touch your face. “Why?” he asked. “Why must you be so persistent?”
You let him stroke beneath your eye, let him smooth your hair as you laid there. There was a brief silence, then, “You should’ve killed me.”
“Is that what you want?” His fingers moved thoughtlessly to the junction where wing met human flesh.
“No,” you said, strained. Your eyes kept to a tree trunk across the way. Naoya grazed your open wound; assessing or caring, you did not know, but the action left you tensed. Another tear wet your lashes.
A quiet enveloped him and you again. Even the forest did not dare make a sound.
Naoya splayed his hand over the tear. “Can you feel this?” he asked, genuine, wondering. When you groaned, he removed his hand. “I…Father said this wouldn’t hurt you,” he spoke softly to himself.
You were shaking your head weakly, arms coming beneath your body in an attempt to lift upward.
He pushed down gently on your shoulder, moving you back to the ground. “Don’t, you’ll only bring yourself more pain.”
Draped on the forest floor, the haze returned, your hearing and vision dipped and wavered.
Depressants, Naoya murmured angrily. You scarcely caught the mention of tea, as well. In your liminal thoughts, you threaded the words together into coherency: Naobito had placed opiates into your drink earlier in the evening, anticipating this very outcome. However, he had grossly underestimated your body’s strange perseverance.
“Don’t fall asleep,” he was telling you, patting your cheek, jostling your shoulder. “Do not fall asleep.”
You, distantly, felt him leave. When he returned, the slick cold of glass pressed your lips open.
“Drink it,” he demanded, almost frantically. He must have found a blood phial somewhere amongst the grasses, unshattered despite your fall.
That horrible taste of cursed blood fell to your tongue, spreading through your mouth as Naoya kept your chin righted. You did not understand what he was doing. He let you go, rising somewhere else. There came the sound of a quick snap, the arrow; Naoya pulled your wing from the broken arrow and your fingers clawed gouges into the ground, ripped skin being tugged at by the wood of the shaft.
Don’t touch me, you wished to say. Don’t return me to those rooms, to you.
“The estates are in disarray right now,” he said unconcernedly.
You breathed out, sharp, through your nose like a cornered beast, a simple sign of acknowledgment.
Naoya continued, sitting himself before you, “I found Toji in your rooms, as if he’d been waiting for someone. He said you had escaped—that you injured him and killed the other men for it. He also warned us against following you, that you were far too dangerous.”
Your body began to tremble, the cursed blood chilling your own. Toji had lied to dissuade them from attempting to capture you; it had not been enough.
Naoya pushed closer. The wounds in your wings ached as they slowly closed.
“Why can’t you let me go?” you asked, and it was a weak inquiry, spoken with lips that scarcely opened. You shifted in panic when he reached for you, your nostrils flaring, breath quickening. Naoya pulled you, gingerly, to rest in his lap; he pressed your head to his shoulder, let your wings drag behind you and lay with little strength.
“Have you not realized it yet?” he asked against the crown of your head.
And you remained silent, mouth thinning tightly. You were afraid of his next words.
“For all you hate me, you have always been mine to have.” Naoya spoke methodically, gauging each of your movements. “You have fought me for so long, and here we find ourselves: together, unchanged.”
Your fingers twisted in his clothing, a wing twitching.
He held you like a lover might, close and tight. “I said to you once that you cannot cheat death, so let me offer you one more thing.” Naoya paused.
Beneath your hands, you could feel his chest lift and fall, his breath fluttering your hair. You were weak in his arms, susceptive to his hand that brought your face to his.
Naoya had always been beautiful, a beauty that brought you to the edge of a cliff and asked of you to fall with it. Though, you had never fallen, too caught on the hatred that guided you away.
If only Naoya was a different man, and you, a different woman.
He said, “You cannot fight Fate with a blade, darling.”
Then, Naoya kissed you beneath the trees, and what a strange thing it was. He was warm, uncertain, and slow; he kept you against him, his lips brushing yours when he pulled away only enough to see your eyes.
He was watching you curiously, touching his palm to your cheek, running his thumb along your lips pinkened by him. His nose brushed yours, as if in affection.
“I know,” you said, low and hushed.
Your talons bore into Naoya’s shoulder, reaching bone, blood pulsing as he shouted in agony. And then you were running, dashing carelessly through that forest, tripping and stumbling. Your wings beat in waiting, pacing your rhythm until they filled with the autumn wind.
Naoya bellowed through the forest, his angered words lost to the air that scurried around you. His blood had begun to sticky your hand, warm as his body had been.
And you flew desperately that night, tears wetting your eyes before being plucked away by the wind.
It hurt, it was a wound like no other: the freedom that you fought for, finally regained.
-----
Present Day, Seven Years Later
The Moon peered from beyond the horizon; she did not want to watch this.
Naoya laid bleeding on the wooden floors of the Zen’in estates. He feared he would continue to spill his blood on those panels. Beside him laid his succumbed aunt, her mouth was slackened, features wholly blank.
He watched her blood pour, and pour, and pour around them. He watched his blood spill, and spill, and spill into hers. Red unto red; blood unto blood.
In all the moments Naoya believed he might die, they had never been in the midst of a battle, or from a grave wound. They had always been with you.
Tucked within that old forest, catching you when you were younger; by that cold river, when you pulled him closer; in that desolate courtyard, when you cut him; and that egregious night, when you got away.
You were the only thing capable of death, and Naoya believed it so. As it be, you cannot dance with skeletons and expect them to have hearts.
He was dying when he heard the footsteps. Naoya could only wait and play witness to whomever stumbled upon him.
And then came your voice. Your terrible, beautiful, cold voice.
“Oh, Naoya,” you breathed.
He wanted to move, needed to see if you had truly returned. Though, his limbs remained weakened, his thoughts reeling rampantly.
“Naoya,” you whispered gently, smoothing his blood-matted hair, “I’m not done with you yet."