[Suguru has him there: this isn't exactly generous! But the first hints were for free, and Satoru might argue that point for the sake of prolonging this even further. But truth be told, he's been in the woods for a while now, and wouldn't mind an excuse to head back somewhere where he can safely rest and eat a meal of questionable unsweetened food. The prize gives him an excuse to find Suguru's camp and make himself comfortable again, for a short while.
And since Suguru agreed to his terms, which surely he knows includes Satoru coming to claim the prize he chooses, he simply replies:]
[the relief suguru feels? the relief suguru feels. the chances of it being a living, breathing creature were slim, yes, but the thought of satoru becoming the caretaker of a white-furred, blue-eyed cat, or dog, or whatever else... there is only so much room in their shelter(s), and god forbid a satoru-like creature take up an undue amount of space...
that aside, though: ah. that leaves talking as suguru's only hint—and while defeat is inevitable, suguru still takes a few minutes to think this through. the options are so limited; in the end, it comes right back around to:]
A doll?
[a satoru gojo™ doll, featuring satoru gojo™ catchphrases. that would track.]
There's that flash of somewhat smug amusement again, even though Suguru was actually pretty close with his guess. If he had more chances, Satoru is sure he would have gotten it right, which is exactly why this game is traditionally limited to three tries. Given more, Suguru would easily narrow it down, no matter how obscure the gift.
Time for the reveal! Suguru receives (1) video clip of the long furby. It babbles in a way that seems to be celebrating Satoru's victory, with phrases like "Wah!" and "Yippee!" Behold, Satoru's survey reward, blinking its creepy blue eyes!]
i win!
[Guess who's starting to make his way out of the woods to claim his prize?]
[or: satoru's win was expected; a snake-like furby was not, hence that jolt of genuine surprise. it's been years—decades—since suguru has seen, let alone thought of, furbies, but he's fairly certain they weren't so... long...
...but such a weird, unexpected twist makes this prize, like, perfectly satoru? as does the chatter, which suguru knows will grow tiresome in under a day—and that satoru will encourage at every available opportunity. this is what suguru gets for wishing to avoid a silent camp! this is the price he must pay.
speaking of camp—suguru glances down at his bowl of slop, wondering if satoru is planning to hurry on over to gloat. the answer is, of course, obvious; satoru never has been a very patient individual, so. time to stand up at last, sending one last text before he leaves this (rather miserable) establishment.]
That looks like a doll to me.
[google says it's more of a toy than a doll, but details, details. maybe this is suguru once again seeking ways to prolong this conversation? maybe this is a distraction as he heads back to their newest shared space: a drafty, one-room shack situated on the village outskirts. at least there's a bed! peasant living at its finest.]
[Sensing a brief flash of surprise, Satoru grins as he walks through the woods, heading in the direction of the village. In a way, catching Suguru off guard is a prize in and of itself; it's been so long since Satoru has seen true surprise on his face that he has trouble picturing it. But the distance of text messages is what allowed them to play this game at all, so he accepts it in the form in which he experiences it. The rings complicate matters for them, considering the many emotions they reveal, but when it comes to something small and harmless like picking up on a small bout of surprise — Satoru is glad he decided to claim one of them for himself.]
no way
[He types as he walks; it doesn't take him too long to near the edge of the woods, and since he's already taken care of a couple of monsters, he isn't interrupted by anything on his way.]
don't tell me you don't know the difference between a doll and a furby
[They're worlds apart! And Satoru will die on the hill of those technicalities because he wants his prize.]
[later—when he's alone with both his thoughts and his ring—suguru will continue considering the implications of this connection? the possible advantages and the definite drawbacks, for these rings are uncomfortably invasive; they run the risk of revealing truths that, for the sake of this temporary team-up, need to remain hidden from view. nothing good will come of nostalgia.
and yet this disagreement, if it can even be called that, is nostalgic? this is precisely the sort of thing they'd argue about after class, sending shoko wandering away to search for better company—which means that suguru should end it, not indulge it.
but, well—]
Children play with both. That makes your doll the perfect prize.
[he's just sayin'.
anyway, with that said, it's shaping up to be a bitterly cold evening; suguru's fingers can only take so much, which is why he tucks his phone back into his pocket before picking up his pace. the shack isn't too far? yet another camp left in sprinkles' care—and as satoru has apparently made it his goal to spoil the curse, suguru is aiming to make it back before satoru has the chance.]
[It is cold, and that's even more apparent when Satoru leaves the woods and no longer has the cover of trees to break up the wind. His Infinity helps buffer him against strong gusts, but he has no control over the accompanying temperature, and so he feels an ache in his fingers as he texts Suguru back. But Satoru is undeterred by the weather, especially when it comes to silly arguments that seem plucked out of simpler times.
And a furby is not a doll.]
you're jealous huh
[Who wouldn't want a furby with which to lighten the dour mood and various threats of this car? The rings serve a purpose, sure, but they're also dangerous.
(Granted, his furby isn't without risks of its own, but details.)
Satoru has been doing his part on getting his acquaintances' minds off of illnesses and the like with his prize, which he wears over his neck to compliment his obnoxious suit up until he gets close to Suguru's shack. As fun as it would be to inflict Whipped Cream on Suguru immediately, Satoru decides to hang it from a nearby tree, keeping them both safe from clumsy mishaps for the time being (and potentially frightening anyone who nears their camp). Then he faces the shack.
It's — a letdown. Maybe not as much of a letdown as the treehouse, but Satoru was holding out hope for something a little more comfortable, or at least something that looks like it can withstand the elements. There's a mansion in town, so the least the housing app could give them is a building that won't blow over in the next storm. And while Satoru takes most things in stride, living in squalor doesn't exactly come naturally to him.
At least he'll actually fit in this shack, instead of it being a repeat of the treehouse.
As he nears the sad excuse for shelter, he whistles for Sprinkles, who happily trots over to him. Curses generally don't care about the weather, but after lavishing it with pets, Satoru tells it to come inside to warm up with him. Sprinkles obeys and follows Satoru up to the door.
Satoru hesitates, only for a fraction of a second, taking the time to think about the ring around his finger and recall the cost of the last two times he and Suguru met up. For all that they may have indulged nostalgic games, the situation between them remains the same. And for all the ring has given him glimpses into Suguru's emotions, it serves as a reminder of Suguru grasping his hand.
When he enters the shack, he's greeted not with warm air, but with a more muted chill, making it immediately evident that the one-room building did not come with a heater or stove. And for the first time, Satoru's typical good humor is interrupted by a little, tiny blip of homesickness that he immediately ignores in favor of banging his cane on the floor and declaring:]
I'm here for my prize.
[And so is Sprinkles! Coming through the door right on his heels. Satoru closes the door behind him, because it's cold enough in this shack.
And because busying himself with canes and doors alike makes it a little bit easier to face Suguru in person once again.]
Edited (late edits for my late night tag) 2021-09-09 08:04 (UTC)
[the interior of the shack is marginally better than its exterior? the walls are paper-thin, yes, but there's a small table with two chairs shoved into a corner; there's a chest in which to stash valuables; there's that aforementioned bed, covered with both a clean quilt and (hopefully) clean furs. it could be worse!
it could also be much, much better, given that two people will be sharing this space. something suguru gives actual thought as he settles at the table, sensing satoru's approach—and then hearing him in the "yard," cooing to the curse suguru purposely allowed to continue wandering about. seeking and/or offering distractions is a weak strategy; it doesn't prevent so much as it postpones, but the memory of their last meeting is impossible to avoid. as sensible as drawing that line in the sand was, suguru does not want a repeat performance.
(but how does one effectively straddle that line? how do they effectively straddle that line? there's too much to ignore, too much to forget.)
thankfully, however, satoru proves as effective a distraction as ever, choosing to make an unnecessarily loud entrance simply because he can—while wearing an unnecessarily loud outfit. not a true surprise, thanks to satoru's many selfies, but as suguru takes in this suit and the cane...
...sprinkles ambles over to the table, investigating the floor beneath it just in case its master, like, dropped some tasty crumbs; suguru pays it absolutely no mind, because for the second time this evening: what in god's name is going on? how is he supposed to once again exist in the strange space between serious and ridiculous? satoru's specialty, perhaps, but it's been years since suguru has been caught up in this whirlwind; it's difficult to judge what is up and what is down.
so as suguru sits back in his chair, just barely raising a brow, he simply says the first thing that comes to mind:]
[The bed is what Satoru looks at first, once he's done fussing with the door. In part, because it is the largest piece of furniture in the small shack, but also because it offers another diversion — another focal point he uses to ground himself in preparation for the evening ahead. The bed looks more inviting than it should, considering the state of the shack as a whole, but that's because it's the only source of potential warmth. Regardless, there's a complaint preloaded on Satoru's tongue, because while he likes to think he's a grin and bear it kind of guy, he's also used to the bear it part of life being a little kinder to him — and having the means to adjust it if necessary.
But Satoru doesn't get to make his complaint, because Suguru chooses to comment on his outfit instead. In response, Satoru dramatically turns his attention to him with a pleased grin. He didn't get to choose his clothing, but the outfit is a good ice breaker, and on top of that, it fits him: obnoxious in pattern and color, with an unnecessary cane that he now tosses up in the air and effortlessly catches, showing off and giving something else for Suguru to take in and potentially disapprove. Better than giving them space to consider the tension that still exists between them, however muted it may be in the wake of their text message games.]
Why not?
[He finally steps across the shack to the small table, since he is here for a purpose, and that purpose is to take something from Suguru — something benign but personal, that can serve as his prize without adding yet another ripple to their truce. Once the gap is crossed, he sets one hand on the vacant chair's back, and holds out the cane with the other, so Suguru can get a better look at the knob. Or even take it and try it out for himself!
Sprinkles inspects it first, lifting its head from its search for crumbs to give Satoru the attention he's looking for.]
My win's worth celebrating.
[He meets Suguru's eyes as he makes that declaration, still grinning, though he feels a little internally unsteady — and tries not to wonder too hard about who he most expects to alter the tone of this meeting: Suguru, or himself.
As always, Satoru relies on his antics to pull them through this initial uncertainty — albeit from a distance this time.]
You should try out the Smoke and Mirrors app. Your costume clashes with this car.
[To be fair, Satoru's kind of does too, given its vibrancy, but hey.]
[suguru, still caught up in this getup, only notices he's effectively trapped himself once satoru comes closer. the wall is at his back, and the bed is taking up far too much space off to his side; there is nowhere to go and nothing to focus on, aside from satoru himself—and it isn't that suguru is a coward. there is little he's afraid of, least of all satoru encroaching upon his space, but given their last encounter... given satoru's propensity for taking things too far, too fast...
...well. this encounter is a test, of sorts; suguru would very much like for it to go well, because there's no telling how many more cars they'll need to work through before they find the exit. there's no avoiding one another? if this partnership is to work, satoru needs to return to camp in a timely manner as opposed to pushing himself to his absolute limits.
but there is a difference between recognizing the optimal option and actually pursuing it. as easy as this is—giving that cane a cursory look before shifting his attention upward, offering satoru a look that says, in short: really?—suguru is all too aware that such interactions always taken an emotional toll. he will think of all that he willingly sacrificed; satoru will remember all that he lost; they will both wind up nursing wounds that will be all but impossible to hide, thanks to these rings. neither of them win.
is it better, then, for one of them to lose?
the coldly rational answer is yes—but suguru feels satoru's underlying uncertainty; it's matched by his own, which is perhaps why he's able to relax that much further.]
And yours doesn't? [so far as suguru can tell, it clashes with absolutely everything in this dim and dreary town—something he confirms with another brief once-over, a short hum escaping him as his eyes find their way back to satoru's.] I think I'll pass.
[for now. give him a day or two and he will make a very, very bad decision, but until then he's free to sit here and judge? to reach out for the knob of that cane at last, albeit only to push it back satoru's way. he can only imaging the townspeople and/or passengers satoru has already annoyed with this thing...]
Unless that's your prize.
[bringing this conversation back to its purpose, because honestly, forcing suguru to wear a matching suit sounds like a very satoru thing to do.
[There is still a ring around Satoru's finger — he glances at it as he looks down at Suguru's hand pushing the cane away — and it continues to serve as a reminder of the cost of the last time he and Suguru spent an evening together. But facing Suguru as he is now, the ring also serves as a physical symbol of how intertwined they truly are. Linked by cursed energy, bound by vows, and now joined by jewelry, he and Suguru are as they were years before: inseparable.
And that isn't easy to stomach, when inseparable now means something entirely different than it once did. Now, the space between them can only be crossed with a significant amount of thought paid to emotional defenses. Both of them made sacrifices to link themselves together, and they continue to pay the price every time they meet. In this space, Satoru has no choice but to look upon Suguru not for who he once was, but for who he might be at the end of all of this — an inevitability looming before them both.
Old wounds are still so easily opened, never truly healed, raw under every weighted gaze and the tightening of fingers around something they should not have held in the first place.
(Do you? Suguru had asked.
But the truth is it wasn't long enough. Satoru had always wished for more time.)
The impulse is there: Satoru nearly shoves the cane back in Suguru's direction. He almost laughs and reaches for the prize he has in mind, pulling it free as he would have years ago, as though the wound isn't gaping between them. Satoru considers picking because it's easier for him to make the wound worse than acknowledge it at all. Because he's as stuck as Suguru, and when he picks up on Suguru's uncertainty relaxing, his knee-jerk reaction is to double down against his own.
But Suguru reached out to him with a gesture, and Satoru recognizes the game for what it was.
So this is what Satoru does:
He tempers his grin into a measured smile. He pulls back from Suguru's space, leans his cane against the wall, and takes a seat in the chair opposite of him. Whereas he normally would spread himself to take up what minimal space is available, bumping his foot against Suguru's or stretching his arms out on the small table, he contains himself — simply leans back in the chair, keeping all his limbs to himself in the process.
He allows Suguru to refocus them on the topic, and he says:]
Nah, it's nothing that extreme.
[Though Suguru is right; it would have been, those years ago. Satoru would have enjoyed seeing him walk through town in something as loud as his own suit. But back then, Satoru would have been walking alongside him, watching for reactions. Now, he and Suguru operate independently until they have no choice.
The prize itself is therefore simple.]
Your hair tie.
[Satoru doesn't take. He asks. And in doing so, he keeps that line set firmly between them. Because whereas Satoru himself has pulled Suguru's hair tie free many times before — out of curiosity, in an effort to tease, or so he could run his fingers through Suguru's hair with a slow, gentle touch that Satoru would offer to no other — now he simply rests his hand on his side of the table, his palm facing up, a gesture of his own.]
[age allegedly comes with all manner of things: wisdom, patience, restraint. the willingness and the ability to pull in the reins, which once seemed impossible for someone as excessive as satoru—and yet here is satoru, slipping back into his own space as opposed to demanding more of suguru's. impressive, really. as suguru watches satoru settle into his seat, suguru is once again confronted by the fact that they are both different people; they have both changed, have both grown, and this is satoru both recognizing and respecting that. the line between them is legitimized.
which should be a relief—and it is, in its way, but something within suguru twists all the same.
(because what suguru always admired about satoru—what suguru liked best—was satoru's refusal to conform. oh, it could be frustrating; suguru was often the bridge, the tether, the person tasked with keeping satoru in check, but wasn't it fun to be swept up in it all? to ignore what was expected and to do what he pleased, if only for a time.)
but this new, subdued version of satoru is what suguru all but demanded in the last car, and thus suguru is forced to accept it. nothing that extreme, satoru says. of course not. maintaining a certain distance is their new "normal."
and that should make satoru's chosen prize—what? simpler? motive- and meaning-free? a hair tie is such a small thing, after all; it's certainly better than satoru requesting the prize he'd missed in the museum car, and yet, as suguru studies him for a moment, suguru considers how strangely intimate an item a hair tie is. something that is worn day in, day out; something that few are ever allowed to touch. he wonders, then, what makes this a worthwhile prize in satoru's mind: its personal nature, or the minor inconvenience it poses...
...but there is satoru's upturned hand, kept at a respectful distance.]
That's all?
[an amused exhale—a not-quite-laugh—as suguru brings a hand to the back of his head, slipping a finger beneath the tie looped about the base of his bun. it doesn't take him long at all to unwind it; a few practiced twists of his wrist and his hair is free, much of it falling forward to frame his face. it's sure to irritate suguru in a day or so, but for now, with the smallest of smiles:]
Trying out a new hairstyle to match your new outfit?
[it could be stunning. but that aside: with his hair tie now dangling from the tip of his pointer finger, suguru stretches forward, entering satoru's space to present his prize—and if suguru lingers? if he chooses not to drop the hair tie, but to press it to satoru's palm with the tips of his fingers, testing the infinity between them? that, too, is a gesture.]
He told himself it was due to the benign nature of the object — something small and noninvasive, free of the complications that come with Suguru's other, very limited belongings. He figured he'd get a little enjoyment out of seeing Suguru annoyed at his hair falling into his face whenever their paths cross. And it seemed like a harmless way to gloat, free of the tension that could arise from less subtle rewards: Satoru would wear the band around his wrist, Suguru would know it is there, and there would be no repercussions to the way Satoru occasionally hiked up his sleeve to remind him of his win.
But when Suguru reaches behind himself to remove the tie, Satoru's attention is entirely arrested by the way his hair falls free around his face. He finds himself resisting yet another impulse: the desire to reach, to touch, to tuck the strands away.
The last time Satoru saw Suguru with his hair down, Suguru breathed his last.
And maybe that's the reason behind the slight hitch in his chest as Suguru holds the tie between them — as Suguru crosses the line between them to touch. Maybe that's why Satoru's Infinity allows him in without so much as a conscious thought, inviting the contact of his finger against his palm. Maybe that's why Satoru closes his hand before Suguru can pull away, catching both the tie and his finger for a fleeting moment.
Or maybe, for all that Satoru is trying to restrain himself, he can't hold back from asking for a little more — from accepting that which Suguru is giving freely, then chasing it before it fades, seeking to prolong something that, for once, does not feel like it is plucked from the past, but born entirely of the present.
Briefly, Satoru's fingers close, and when he chooses to pull away — capturing the hair tie, but removing himself from Suguru's hand — it is less due to reining himself in than it is the fact that Suguru's touch is cold. And that, too, makes him think of the last time he saw Suguru with his hair down.]
I would...
[He speaks with as playful of a tone as ever, dropping his attention to the hair tie in the center of his palm, opening his hand to reveal the simple prize. Easier to look at the tie itself than to think of the many ways in which he could brush back the burden of unruly hair from Suguru's face. Easier to slip the tie about his wrist than to consider how the loose strands soften Suguru's features, making him appear younger.]
But where's the fun in that?
[To use the tie for its intended purpose would make it functional, a prize claimed for a reason, which takes away from the minor inconvenience of losing it. Hence, it becomes a bracelet for the foreseeable future.
Even the stupidest prizes have a cost, Satoru thinks. And when the band is snug around his wrist, he pulls it taut, then releases it, allowing it to snap against his skin. On the surface, this is as obnoxious of a move as Satoru banging his cane. But this, too, becomes a kind of reminder.
Then he holds his wrist up, still firmly behind the line that exists between them.]
I'll wear it like this.
[And only then does he meet Suguru's eyes again, that smile still on his lips, only smaller now — weakened, when he considers Suguru's hair, Suguru's touch, and the elasticity of a band stretched a little too far.]
[initiating contact is not a mindless action; there is a reason for it, though, if pressed, suguru would find it difficult to nail down. is it a test? a reward for good behavior, as patronizing as that absolutely is? the simple desire to touch? suguru would like to think it's anything but—and yet, as satoru's fingers loosely close over his own, there it is: an unmistakable, undeniable spark of something, serving as both a temptation and a warning. ah.
even the smallest indulgences are dangerous, as suguru well knows. they are often the start to something larger, a snowball that grows and grows and grows as it rolls, unchecked, down a steep hill—but suguru sets his sense to the side, for the moment. ignores all that he expects of himself in order to do what seems, feels, fitting, because satoru once again let him in; the least suguru can do is stay.
(while thinking, stupidly, of how easy it would be to twist his hand, fingers finding their way between satoru's. another gesture; a far more meaningful one, at that, but the price is too high, too high.)
satoru, however, remains the responsible one, releasing suguru's fingers after only a few seconds. the briefest touch, as if this is a re-do of, or an apology for, seizing suguru's hand in camp—and suguru should be pleased; he supposes that he is, on some level, but as he draws his hand back to his side of the table, he glances down at it, wondering if this exchange was a step forward or a step back.
but it isn't over, is it? even as he watches satoru slide his prize over his wrist, suguru knows that everything has looped back to him—because there is something almost vulnerable about satoru, now. a sadness that suguru can sense, thanks to his ring, but he never needed that in the past; he could read satoru as easily as anything.
and some things are better left alone; maybe this—them—is one of them, but suguru considers the difference between closing this door between them or leaving it ajar. he could easily do either, depending on how he'd like to move forward; all it would take is the right (or wrong) words.
so.]
Don't break it.
[a mild chide as suguru places his elbow upon the table, resting his chin in the hand that satoru was (almost) holding a few seconds before. satoru's smile shrinks; suguru's smile softens, just barely, before he adds:]
I still have to win it back.
[an offering, small as it is. a tentative way forward.]
Edited (i TOLD you i'd mix up their names one day) 2021-09-11 05:15 (UTC)
[Those words, coupled with that small smile, catch Satoru off guard. It isn't what he expects to hear or see, despite being privy to the occasional glimpse into Suguru's emotions — despite the way Suguru touched his palm entirely on his own accord. Maybe Satoru is, to some degree, more guarded than he was at the beginning of this arrangement; maybe he's trying to keep himself rooted because Suguru is giving when he should be withholding. The chide is familiar, but the offering that follows is as dangerous as it is wanted — or rather, dangerous because it is wanted.
Each game they play returns them to a place that neither of them are meant to occupy; it will do nothing to stave away the inevitability of the end of their arrangement. It will put them at risk. And yet, if Satoru is as honest with himself as he has vowed to be with Suguru, he has no choice but to admit that he missed this. He missed the one and only person who understood him, who complemented him, who knew exactly what to say when Satoru felt less like the strongest and more like someone who might easily crack if given a just right amount of pressure.
Determined as he is to be responsible, to keep himself from pushing too far, there's only one answer that Satoru should give in reply. If Suguru will not shut the door now, before it's too late, then it should fall on to Satoru. All business, no pleasure, no games — Satoru should slam the door shut and look away. But if their time together on this train has proven anything at all, it's that Suguru is still, to this day, Satoru's weakness. Just as the sight of Suguru's body trapped Satoru in the prison realm, these words — this way forward — traps Satoru in a mess of his own making.
He says:]
You could try...
[And playfully trails off, the implication being that he is leaving the door as open as Suguru — that he will accept this tentative way forward, even if this path will prove painful.
Because that soft smile, the way that Suguru looks at him, the tone in which he delivers that comment — it reminds Satoru what it is like to be seen, known, and understood.
After that, the evening stretches on. Satoru eats his questionable meal, plays with Sprinkles, and takes up space in the small shack. Once night falls upon them and it comes time to rest, Satoru decides to stay. The atmosphere between him and Suguru is better after their game and subsequent prize exchange, and he really should rest, considering that this car promises to drain his energy quicker than the others, given the monsters and threats that lurk about. And failing to rest not only means that he could run out of energy, but also that he'll be at risk for contracting the mysterious illness plaguing this car. Rest is more important than ever.
For both of them. Suguru's well-being is also on Satoru's mind, and that's why he decides to mess around with the Happy Home app himself. It's safest for Satoru to stay in the same building as Suguru so he's protected while his technique is down, but it isn't wise for either of them to sleep on the cold floor without sufficient bedding. He therefore attempts to make a shelter of his own so he can bring a mattress, blankets, and any other useful furniture to Suguru's shack.
When he returns ten minutes later, he's empty handed.]
The app crashed.
[And now won't work at all! There's a friendly error message about trying again later, but Satoru is skeptical. This train hasn't exactly proven to have anyone's best interests in mind.
But there's nothing he can do, given the shortages of supplies due to the illness sweeping through the car, except walk over to the bed and take inventory of the blankets and furs. There aren't enough to make a reasonable pallet on the floor, and under normal circumstances, that wouldn't be a huge deal. But with the threats of this car...]
We've got to share.
[He says it with some amusement, although he knows that situation is, once again, too much. They've only barely just repaired what was ripped open when they held hands; to indulge such close proximity again would be foolish.
But they both need to sleep. Neither of them can afford to hit a wall of exhaustion and get sick. They're in this together, and that includes relying on each other's good health.
So! Satoru tosses a pillow at Suguru, attempting to keep things easy between them despite yet another difficult choice.]
You better not snore.
[Satoru is more likely to snore, especially given how hard he'll sleep when he finally manages it, considering all the energy he has to replenish. But once again, it's easier to treat this situation as lightly as the rest.]
[funny, really, how a handful of hours can seem both too short and too long. the mood is almost comfortable? laced, of course, with the underlying tension that they can never truly escape, but as suguru listens to satoru complain about his dinner, watches satoru try (and fail) to convince this curse to perform a trick—well. compared to their last evening together—the silence heavy as they'd gone about their individual business, the distance between them strictly maintained—this is better; this could very well be the start of a far more productive partnership. the risk was worth it.
(the risk was not worth it; the mood is too comfortable; suguru has made an incalculable error, because this small indulgence will lead to others. which one will prove to be too much? who will end it, this, them?)
night, however, does fall—and with it, the temperature. the shack makes it marginally more bearable; the thin wooden walls are, apparently, good for something, but by the time satoru decides to step outside and try his luck, suguru has cast surreptitious glance after surreptitious glance toward the bed. it is far too cold for either of them to sleep on the floor, just as it is far too cold to strip many blankets and/or furs from the bed. they do indeed need more of everything...
which means, of course, that they receive absolutely nothing. suguru can't even pretend to be surprised when satoru breezes back inside a few minutes later, showing off the error message on his screen; this is simply how things seem to go for them, which is why he merely hums, nudging at the curse currently stretched out atop his feet. rest is necessary. for both of them. suguru briefly considers pulling out his own phone, just on the offhanded chance there's an option to request something new—
—but. we've got to share, satoru says, following up one bombshell with another—though the pillow is, at least, easier to catch, easier to process. suguru knows what to do with it; suguru does not know what to do with the sudden thought of lying side by side, because when is the last time he's fallen asleep next to anyone? to a fellow adult? he's been far too busy for anything more than the occasional encounter, but those are quick, impersonal; suguru never lingers.
so it's a slight uneasiness he feels, though he knows that sharing this bed is the best option—the only option—for them both. it's only logical—but as he stands, approaching the bed just to place this pillow in what he assumes will be his half of the bed, it's impossible to ignore the memories of sharing a much smaller bed, once. satoru, stealing his blankets; satoru, ignoring a sequence of alarms; satoru, clutching the hem of his shirt.
once they would have fallen into this bed with no hesitation whatsoever. a reflex, really—but now it takes effort to pull down the covers, though he manages a small, somewhat amused huff as he mentally maps out his space. he could say no, and yet, once again:]
I'll keep that in mind.
[a quiet joke, for he recognizes that satoru is also doing what he can to preserve the mood. what's difficult for one is all too frequently difficult for the other; these rings only prove what suguru already knows, so:]
You'd better not steal all the blankets. [it's like another agreement, of sorts. tit for tat! but also, as suguru gets another look at that godawful suit:] Or wear that jacket.
[sprinkles was crawling over satoru earlier, putting its dusty little caterpillar paws all over that outfit, so please, sir. cmon.]
[The ease with which Suguru catches the pillow and responds to Satoru's warning about snoring should lessen the impact of what lies before them: the single bed, the insufficient blankets, the prospect of sharing. But Satoru feels a flash of Suguru's uneasiness and it ends up fueling his own. Whereas externally, Satoru aims to lead the way here as he does most things — with confidence and levity — internally, he lurches. And for the first time since he and Suguru rejoined in this shack, Satoru thinks that wearing the ring was a mistake. He should have removed it before showing up to claim his prize, for as helpful as it may have been in reestablishing a shaky but functional comfort — an understanding of the complexities that lace each remark spoken between them — it's more difficult to maintain his momentum if he becomes intimately acquainted with Suguru's disquiet.
And it's even more challenging to maintain his good humor if the ring will betray his own lack of surety.
This should be easy. Compared to sleeping outside or sleeping on the floor, sharing a bed shouldn't give either of them pause. It's just a bed, for only one night, and Satoru is tired enough that all of the thoughts that could come with such a scenario should be easily remedied the moment he hits the pillow. But this is yet another situation that forces him to remember the past: the countless times he slept beside Suguru, the whispers spoken late into the night, and the touches meant to comfort, calm, entice.
In the space between Suguru's reply and Suguru's follow-up, Satoru's thoughts wander in the direction of a dangerous question: will there ever be a time that he remembers the past without the pain of what came after? Will he ever be able to look at Suguru without seeing the trail of blood left in his wake, the broken bodies of students, the destruction of a school?
Satoru had to harden his heart once before; now, as he fluffs his own pillow and makes room for himself in Suguru's bed, he finds it increasingly difficult to do. He knew, back when he ended Suguru's life, that Suguru was still painfully human underneath all his atrocious actions and grievous plots — but now he wears the proof around his finger, and feels his humanity keenly. And what choice does Satoru have, except to remind himself, over and over, that he can only help people who want to be saved?
Satoru leaves the ring on his finger. He grins in response to Suguru's words. He makes their bed, and then has no choice but to lie in it — because it's either that, or turning away. And for all Satoru's mistakes — for all this situation is yet another tally — that is the one thing he has never done.
Instead, Satoru seizes the diversion that Suguru provides, releasing the pillow to look down at himself, grabbing the quarters of his suit jacket as if offended.]
What's wrong with it?
[Okay, yeah, he sees the dust marks and casually attempts to wipe them away...and okay, maybe a suit jacket isn't the most ideal sleepwear option, but does Suguru really want him to mess around with the clothing app again?
Actually — Satoru decides that it is a good suggestion, because if the app gives him something even more ridiculous to wear to bed, then neither of them will be thinking about the uncomfortable scenario of sharing a bed. They'll be too distracted by the clothing disaster the app is sure to provide.
So there's no going back now! As he fishes his phone out of his pocket, Satoru glances at Suguru with a look that makes it clear that he expects this to go awry and plans on enjoying it for that reason.
It only takes a few seconds of messing around on his phone, and then!
And Satoru is visibly delighted by this result, if cold, because they aren't in the least bit appropriate pajamas for a drafty shack. But he's going to suppress a shiver and a subsequent complaint in favor of beaming as he says:]
[retreating isn't necessarily a sign of weakness; there are times in which taking a step back proves beneficial—but in this particular scenario, suguru is certain that it would do more harm than good? that it would nullify the tentative progress they've made this evening, because pulling away now would be equal parts cowardly, petty, childish. it's only a bed; it's only one night. neither of them is so foolish as to choose shivering to death over sharing a space for a few hours, a majority of which they will remain blissfully unaware of.
and yet.
one problem, so far as suguru can tell, is that distractions are proving more difficult to find—and less effective as a whole. it's simply impossible to ignore just how connected they are; even watching satoru try (and fail) to brush the dust from his jacket—which should be funny, in a way—means spying the ring upon satoru's finger, the hair tie about satoru's wrist. and what else is there to focus on, in this tiny shack? shifting his attention down to the curse winding around his feet means thinking about the ridiculous name it now answers to; pretending to take inventory of the pillows means thinking about how close their pillows will be, once they claim them; absently brushing a lock of hair from his face means thinking about why his hair is loose in the first place. satoru is inescapable.
but as satoru pushes past the mess of emotions they seemingly share, suguru does the same, refusing to allow his vaguely amused smile to slip as satoru catches his eye. that is a mischievous look if suguru has ever seen one, and while that, too, pains him in some small way, he watches satoru tap something on his screen—
—and pop into a pair of pajamas he has no business wearing. furbies? more furbies? this would have sent a younger suguru into the mother of all laughing fits; he would have almost certainly needed to leave the room, but now, as both brows lift:]
Is it? [a dusty suit might have been better, considering the length of leg that is currently on display—but that aside:] ...Maybe it does suit you.
[a clown suit for a clown. very fitting. suguru feels genuine amusement welling within, something he should be grateful for—and yet it's what sends him turning away, a huff of a laugh escaping him as he perches on the edge of the bed. he wants to laugh, to really laugh; he can't allow himself to, so! time, then, to carefully pull his feet free from sprinkles' smothering affection, ostensibly so he can remove his sandals. lightly, easily:]
If you freeze, you only have yourself to blame.
[because wishing for so impractical an outfit is totally satoru's style! if suguru were to use the same app, surely he would, despite this train's meddling, receive something more sensible—which is why he plucks his own phone from his pocket? considers it for a moment before unlocking it simply to hit that one (1) button, following satoru's lead every bit as easily as he once did, and—poof! warm woodsman chic™, which is... a definite relief.
and while suguru had absolutely no control over this, he's absolutely casting a look back over his shoulder.]
[Satoru didn't get to pick! This totally isn't his fault.
Except, Suguru is kind of right. He did tap those fateful buttons on his phone in hopes of getting a pair of pajamas as jarring as his suit. In a way, he asked for this, and he is feeling a little bit smug as a result of being given yet another eyesore of an outfit. This train car is so dour and the situation with Suguru is so complicated — these pajamas are a much needed means of keeping their situation light, even if he'll suffer for them.
And he is suffering! He's cold! And he feels even colder once Suguru messes with his phone and is given a set of warm and comfortable pajamas. They even look like they fit him, whereas Satoru's are definitely a size too small and therefore not nearly as forgiving as they should be. He's paying the price for his antics yet again, even though this time was out of his hands.
But that isn't going to stop him from laughing out loud — unrestrained, compared to Suguru's attempt at keeping himself reeled in — when he sees that pattern because Suguru may be warm and cozy in that getup but:]
You look like...
[What's the name of that American...give him half a second to remember...]
Paul Bunyan.
[How does he know who this is? Does Satoru play gacha games in his spare time? Maybe...
Cultural knowledge aside, Satoru is only getting colder and he may very well freeze at this rate. So there's really no room for thinking deep thoughts about emotions or the fact that Suguru is going to climb in bed right after him. Satoru takes off his blindfold and sets it and his phone beside the bed. Then he lies down and immediately does what Suguru told him not to do.
He hogs the blankets, wrapping himself in all of them.
Only after he starts warming up a little does he allow himself to think on what — who — will inevitably follow.]
Sprinkles!
[Come get in this bed before Suguru does. Keep both their minds off of everything except a curse taking up too much space in bed, getting its dusty feet on everything...]
[satoru may play (and waste far too much money on) gacha games, but suguru most certainly does not—and thus paul bunyan sails right over his head. of the many books he's read throughout his life, few have focused on american folklore; this reference is yet another example of satoru existing in an entirely different world.
but it makes satoru laugh, and maybe that's what matters, in this moment? even if it does bring about a pain in suguru's chest, something he ignores as he bends down to tuck his matching slippers (nice) out of sprinkles' line of sight. the last thing he needs is this curse eating what is currently his only pair of shoes...
...and the second-to-last thing suguru needs: satoru stealing all of the blankets before he can so much as sit upright. damn.
except that suguru knows this is a distraction tactic, of sorts. satoru buying himself some time, which is why suguru only sighs as he stands, deciding to address this issue after placing his phone on the table (and patting his pockets, feeling for the charm that is both there and, blessedly, muted by the thick fabric). he, at least, is not a heathen; his phone will not go on the floor.
but the price he pays for his kindness is satoru calling sprinkles onto the bed, which—well, of course the curse hops right up? and into suguru's spot, no less, sniffing under the pillow to see if, like, a tasty piece of human is hidden beneath it. hope is all it has these days... surely one day its tasty treat will come...
there is, however, only so much foolishness suguru can tolerate—and so, as he makes his way back to his side of the bed, he gives sprinkles a look.]
Off.
[which is not strictly necessary; a verbal command is not needed, given that suguru controls this curse's will, but it feels fitting? and sends sprinkles scurrying into satoru's space, stomping all over his legs. enjoy that, you cocoon of a man, but also:]
This isn't your bed, [suguru says, holding out a hand in an expectant manner,] and those aren't your blankets. Stop being selfish.
[Whoa, Suguru, there's no need to be so strict! So mean! Poor Sprinkles, now absolutely crushing Satoru's legs, but instead of complaining about that, Satoru curls up into a ball, pulling his to himself to make room at the foot of the bed, allowing the curse to walk all over him. He slept like this in the treehouse, he can manage it again. His feet are now kind of in Suguru's space, though. There's a lot of Satoru and only so much bed.
And only so many blankets! But Suguru has the right of it; Satoru is employing a distraction tactic, and the time for such antics is swiftly running out, especially considering Suguru's tone and that hand hovering expectantly beside him.]
But I'm cold.
[A pathetic protest, coupled with an equally pathetic sniffle as Satoru grabs a handful of blanket and thrusts it behind him, blindly seeking Suguru's hand since his back is now to him.
He's cold, and he's not ready for this yet, and neither is Suguru, if that brief pang of pain that Satoru felt a few moments ago is anything to go by. But they've now reached the point where no amount of whining or curse involvement will delay what they need to do. So he gives in, handing over then blankets, then doing his best to shift to the edge of the bed, attempting to give Suguru distance.
And surely Satoru should just close his eyes as Suguru settles in bed. Surely, he knows better than to indulge his desire to chat before sleep, because figurative distance is as important as literal distance.
But he is, regrettably, still himself and thus:]
I was in the woods when you texted.
[Pillow talk...he can't help it.]
Took care of a few monsters.
[This car is dangerous, and maybe that's what he wants to talk about. Or maybe he's looking for some insight into what Suguru has been doing with his time.
Or it could be that Satoru is a glutton for punishment, and just doesn't know when to stop.
[there is something childish about this? satoru, refusing to roll over lest he meet suguru's eyes while offering the bare minimum—suguru thinks, briefly (and stupidly), of nanako. always the more willful of his two girls, prone to sulking—briefly—whenever she didn't get her way; she'd crawled into her bed many a time, keeping her back to the door as she pretended she didn't hear suguru wishing her good night. this reminds him of that, in a way—but then, of course, there was mimiko, always more likely to cry than to sulk. sometimes she turned away from him as she did so, refusing to let him see her tears; she knew it would only make her feel worse.
that's how children are; that's how people are. suguru has always understood this, on some level, which is perhaps why he managed to befriend satoru all those years ago? others wrote satoru off as an annoyance, a lost cause; suguru saw the person beneath the act and realized: oh. so this is how satoru deals with it all.
and this is how satoru deals with—well, with this: by curling into a ball, silent and still. there are, suguru supposes, worse ways to handle this.
but that doesn't make crawling into bed, tugging the blankets over him as he does so, any easier. silence should be a blessing; it feels rather like a curse in this moment, something weighing down his limbs as he gingerly rolls onto his side, his back facing satoru. a necessity—as well as a small comfort, he hopes. a small comfort.
one that is matched, surprisingly enough, by satoru's voice? it shouldn't be a surprise; it very much is, hence the slight delay before suguru offers a quiet:]
Oh?
[which isn't enough; to leave satoru hanging like this would bring an end to this strange comfort, but suguru still takes a moment to shift, pulling the edge of the blanket that much higher. if he concentrates—if he's left alone in silence for too long—he can feel the warm of satoru's calf, so very close to his feet.]
The villagers will be grateful. They haven't had much luck taking care of them on their own. [hmm—] They say there are too many of them in the woods.
[or: suguru spent his day milling about, charming people, birds, and bears into offering him information about their home. he was personable and polite, once; he still can be, when the need arises.]
[Satoru remembers many of the lasts he shared with Suguru. He remembers the last time he and Suguru talked before Suguru turned away. He remembers the last text messages they exchanged. He remembers Suguru's last smile, last words, last breath. He remembers the last time they shared a hotel room bed, and he remembers the rain that fell long into that night.
He remembers a lot.
He does not remember the last time he and Suguru shared one of their beds, in their space, before Suguru left the school.
It should be a relief, to be spared the burden of a final memory as he lies in Suguru's bed once more. It should be nice, to be given this break, a pause in the endless considerations of how things once were. This is a reprieve: Satoru can shut his eyes and listen to Suguru intone that quiet Oh? without thinking of finalities.
Yet, as he counts the breaths between that single utterance and the statements that he nearly thinks won't follow, the knowledge that he can't remember something so trivial, yet so important, settles in his chest as an ache.
It must have been an inconsequential morning. They must have woken up together in a blur. Satoru was probably late, having snoozed too long, and he probably had to leave in a rush. Maybe Suguru was already long out of bed before Satoru decided to greet the day. Maybe that's why the memory failed to stick.
There are many moments that Satoru failed to understand were important while they were happening. He didn't realize the fleeting nature of significance — the way hindsight would color that which seemed trifling at the time. He didn't realize that Suguru himself was temporary, contingent, as fleeting as all the small details that Satoru would retrace in his mind long after he left — and then long after his death.
Satoru is spared the pain of a final moment that he didn't realize was part of their ending — and that in and of itself is painful. It feels like a loss. It has Satoru wondering: Does Suguru remember? He was always better at slowing down and recognizing moments for what they were, whereas Satoru shoved himself from moment to moment with forward momentum.
(Except for moments like these: when he slowed down to listen to Suguru breathe in and out, when he waited for Suguru's words, when he reached across the gap of mattress between them to clutch Suguru's shirt — to hold him close.)
Now Suguru lies beside him, facing the other way, an impossible distance stretched between them, and Satoru thinks that this too will lead to an end: of their discussion, of Satoru's attempt to converse, and of Suguru's unspoken reply.
But Suguru speaks. Satoru exhales. He closes his eyes and thinks about the slope of Suguru's shoulder, the loose strands of his hair settled across his pillow, the way that Suguru offers what Satoru is seeking. Satoru thinks about Suguru going from villager to villager, gathering information. It reminds him of a time long ago, when he and Suguru would travel to the countryside to exorcise curses, and Suguru would ward off villagers' concerns with a smile and a polite word. He was always better at that than Satoru.]
There're a lot.
[Punctuated by a yawn, Satoru marginally relaxes as he speaks. The conversation eases him in loosening his limbs — still curled, but less defensively, soothed by this talk into accepting the shared bed — and Suguru's proximity.
Satoru could take care of most, if not all of the monsters, if given endless time and cursed energy, but he has neither of those things at his disposal. He has other concerns on his mind, other threats to consider.]
But they've got bigger problems.
[And this is partially why Satoru spent the day in the woods, instead of lingering in town. There are very few things that Satoru can't fight. Give him curses, monsters, and creatures en masse, and he'll emerge victorious. But give him an illness, and Satoru is useless. He never could heal others, and now he can't even heal himself. A plague is an opponent that doesn't respond to power or strength.
He glances over his shoulder, just barely. The motion doesn't grant him sight of Suguru; it serves more as a gesture.]
What do you think we're supposed to be doing?
[What is the objective that seems not to exist? Satoru hasn't paid the objectives much mind up until now, focused as he's been on other matters, but this is one car that warrants a swift exit.]
[it's pitch black within this too-small space; even suguru's well-adjusted eyes can just barely make out the shape of a chair near the foot of the bed, which leaves him little choice but to focus on the person curled up beside him. he can hear every breath, feel every self-inflicted wound—though maybe that isn't entirely fair. he isn't so selfish as to believe that he is at the center of every late night thought; he isn't so callous as to ignore the problems his presence poses.
(which is why he should simply ask what satoru is thinking? offer satoru a chance to—well. it doesn't matter. once, perhaps, satoru may have provided a flippant answer, attempting to deflect before ultimately allowing suguru in; now, however, satoru will almost assuredly keep suguru out, and for good reason. it's safer this way.)
but satoru once again chooses to speak—and suguru thinks of nanako mumbling his name just before he closed the door, of mimiko sidling up to him to curl her fingers around a few of his. little gestures; little ways to ask for—to admit—what is needed.
what do you think we're supposed to be doing?
not this, suguru is sure. anything but this—and yet he hums all the same, replacing thoughts of satoru with thoughts of nervous villagers. of course he'd wandered by the clinic while exploring the village; he'd spoken, albeit briefly, with a bear reeking of alcohol, lending a sympathetic ear as the bear bemoaned the rising number of patients. monsters on one front, illness on the other—and somewhere in the middle, whispers of dead bodies disappearing in the dead of night. there's a puzzle here, which means the true question should be: is this their puzzle to piece together?
the answer, so far as suguru can tell, is obvious—which is one reason he should respond with a single word: sleeping. end this conversation here; ensure they're both in top form come the morning, when they head back into the world to deal with whatever is thrown their way—and yet.]
Solving them.
[the bed is spacious for one, somewhat cramped for two; suguru shifting over to lay flat on his back means that his shoulder just barely brushes satoru's back, but he does his best to ignore it, focusing instead on the darkness above them—and then, as he catches sight of it from the corner of his eye, the pale glow at the nape of satoru's neck. numbers, barely peeking over the collar of his ridiculous top and further obscured by his messy, messy hair, but—ah.
quietly, then, as suguru turns his head before he can think better of it:]
...So yours are blue.
[fitting! and also very eloquent, suguru.]
Edited (an edit for one (1) word) 2021-09-14 20:31 (UTC)
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And since Suguru agreed to his terms, which surely he knows includes Satoru coming to claim the prize he chooses, he simply replies:]
nope!
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[the relief suguru feels? the relief suguru feels. the chances of it being a living, breathing creature were slim, yes, but the thought of satoru becoming the caretaker of a white-furred, blue-eyed cat, or dog, or whatever else... there is only so much room in their shelter(s), and god forbid a satoru-like creature take up an undue amount of space...
that aside, though: ah. that leaves talking as suguru's only hint—and while defeat is inevitable, suguru still takes a few minutes to think this through. the options are so limited; in the end, it comes right back around to:]
A doll?
[a satoru gojo™ doll, featuring satoru gojo™ catchphrases. that would track.]
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[After all those hints!
There's that flash of somewhat smug amusement again, even though Suguru was actually pretty close with his guess. If he had more chances, Satoru is sure he would have gotten it right, which is exactly why this game is traditionally limited to three tries. Given more, Suguru would easily narrow it down, no matter how obscure the gift.
Time for the reveal! Suguru receives (1) video clip of the long furby. It babbles in a way that seems to be celebrating Satoru's victory, with phrases like "Wah!" and "Yippee!" Behold, Satoru's survey reward, blinking its creepy blue eyes!]
i win!
[Guess who's starting to make his way out of the woods to claim his prize?]
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...but such a weird, unexpected twist makes this prize, like, perfectly satoru? as does the chatter, which suguru knows will grow tiresome in under a day—and that satoru will encourage at every available opportunity. this is what suguru gets for wishing to avoid a silent camp! this is the price he must pay.
speaking of camp—suguru glances down at his bowl of slop, wondering if satoru is planning to hurry on over to gloat. the answer is, of course, obvious; satoru never has been a very patient individual, so. time to stand up at last, sending one last text before he leaves this (rather miserable) establishment.]
That looks like a doll to me.
[google says it's more of a toy than a doll, but details, details. maybe this is suguru once again seeking ways to prolong this conversation? maybe this is a distraction as he heads back to their newest shared space: a drafty, one-room shack situated on the village outskirts. at least there's a bed! peasant living at its finest.]
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no way
[He types as he walks; it doesn't take him too long to near the edge of the woods, and since he's already taken care of a couple of monsters, he isn't interrupted by anything on his way.]
don't tell me you don't know the difference between a doll and a furby
[They're worlds apart! And Satoru will die on the hill of those technicalities because he wants his prize.]
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and yet this disagreement, if it can even be called that, is nostalgic? this is precisely the sort of thing they'd argue about after class, sending shoko wandering away to search for better company—which means that suguru should end it, not indulge it.
but, well—]
Children play with both.
That makes your doll the perfect prize.
[he's just sayin'.
anyway, with that said, it's shaping up to be a bitterly cold evening; suguru's fingers can only take so much, which is why he tucks his phone back into his pocket before picking up his pace. the shack isn't too far? yet another camp left in sprinkles' care—and as satoru has apparently made it his goal to spoil the curse, suguru is aiming to make it back before satoru has the chance.]
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And a furby is not a doll.]
you're jealous huh
[Who wouldn't want a furby with which to lighten the dour mood and various threats of this car? The rings serve a purpose, sure, but they're also dangerous.
(Granted, his furby isn't without risks of its own, but details.)
Satoru has been doing his part on getting his acquaintances' minds off of illnesses and the like with his prize, which he wears over his neck to compliment his obnoxious suit up until he gets close to Suguru's shack. As fun as it would be to inflict Whipped Cream on Suguru immediately, Satoru decides to hang it from a nearby tree, keeping them both safe from clumsy mishaps for the time being (and potentially frightening anyone who nears their camp). Then he faces the shack.
It's — a letdown. Maybe not as much of a letdown as the treehouse, but Satoru was holding out hope for something a little more comfortable, or at least something that looks like it can withstand the elements. There's a mansion in town, so the least the housing app could give them is a building that won't blow over in the next storm. And while Satoru takes most things in stride, living in squalor doesn't exactly come naturally to him.
At least he'll actually fit in this shack, instead of it being a repeat of the treehouse.
As he nears the sad excuse for shelter, he whistles for Sprinkles, who happily trots over to him. Curses generally don't care about the weather, but after lavishing it with pets, Satoru tells it to come inside to warm up with him. Sprinkles obeys and follows Satoru up to the door.
Satoru hesitates, only for a fraction of a second, taking the time to think about the ring around his finger and recall the cost of the last two times he and Suguru met up. For all that they may have indulged nostalgic games, the situation between them remains the same. And for all the ring has given him glimpses into Suguru's emotions, it serves as a reminder of Suguru grasping his hand.
When he enters the shack, he's greeted not with warm air, but with a more muted chill, making it immediately evident that the one-room building did not come with a heater or stove. And for the first time, Satoru's typical good humor is interrupted by a little, tiny blip of homesickness that he immediately ignores in favor of banging his cane on the floor and declaring:]
I'm here for my prize.
[And so is Sprinkles! Coming through the door right on his heels. Satoru closes the door behind him, because it's cold enough in this shack.
And because busying himself with canes and doors alike makes it a little bit easier to face Suguru in person once again.]
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it could also be much, much better, given that two people will be sharing this space. something suguru gives actual thought as he settles at the table, sensing satoru's approach—and then hearing him in the "yard," cooing to the curse suguru purposely allowed to continue wandering about. seeking and/or offering distractions is a weak strategy; it doesn't prevent so much as it postpones, but the memory of their last meeting is impossible to avoid. as sensible as drawing that line in the sand was, suguru does not want a repeat performance.
(but how does one effectively straddle that line? how do they effectively straddle that line? there's too much to ignore, too much to forget.)
thankfully, however, satoru proves as effective a distraction as ever, choosing to make an unnecessarily loud entrance simply because he can—while wearing an unnecessarily loud outfit. not a true surprise, thanks to satoru's many selfies, but as suguru takes in this suit and the cane...
...sprinkles ambles over to the table, investigating the floor beneath it just in case its master, like, dropped some tasty crumbs; suguru pays it absolutely no mind, because for the second time this evening: what in god's name is going on? how is he supposed to once again exist in the strange space between serious and ridiculous? satoru's specialty, perhaps, but it's been years since suguru has been caught up in this whirlwind; it's difficult to judge what is up and what is down.
so as suguru sits back in his chair, just barely raising a brow, he simply says the first thing that comes to mind:]
You didn't need to dress up for it.
[lordy.]
that icon lol
But Satoru doesn't get to make his complaint, because Suguru chooses to comment on his outfit instead. In response, Satoru dramatically turns his attention to him with a pleased grin. He didn't get to choose his clothing, but the outfit is a good ice breaker, and on top of that, it fits him: obnoxious in pattern and color, with an unnecessary cane that he now tosses up in the air and effortlessly catches, showing off and giving something else for Suguru to take in and potentially disapprove. Better than giving them space to consider the tension that still exists between them, however muted it may be in the wake of their text message games.]
Why not?
[He finally steps across the shack to the small table, since he is here for a purpose, and that purpose is to take something from Suguru — something benign but personal, that can serve as his prize without adding yet another ripple to their truce. Once the gap is crossed, he sets one hand on the vacant chair's back, and holds out the cane with the other, so Suguru can get a better look at the knob. Or even take it and try it out for himself!
Sprinkles inspects it first, lifting its head from its search for crumbs to give Satoru the attention he's looking for.]
My win's worth celebrating.
[He meets Suguru's eyes as he makes that declaration, still grinning, though he feels a little internally unsteady — and tries not to wonder too hard about who he most expects to alter the tone of this meeting: Suguru, or himself.
As always, Satoru relies on his antics to pull them through this initial uncertainty — albeit from a distance this time.]
You should try out the Smoke and Mirrors app. Your costume clashes with this car.
[To be fair, Satoru's kind of does too, given its vibrancy, but hey.]
geto judgment (tm)
...well. this encounter is a test, of sorts; suguru would very much like for it to go well, because there's no telling how many more cars they'll need to work through before they find the exit. there's no avoiding one another? if this partnership is to work, satoru needs to return to camp in a timely manner as opposed to pushing himself to his absolute limits.
but there is a difference between recognizing the optimal option and actually pursuing it. as easy as this is—giving that cane a cursory look before shifting his attention upward, offering satoru a look that says, in short: really?—suguru is all too aware that such interactions always taken an emotional toll. he will think of all that he willingly sacrificed; satoru will remember all that he lost; they will both wind up nursing wounds that will be all but impossible to hide, thanks to these rings. neither of them win.
is it better, then, for one of them to lose?
the coldly rational answer is yes—but suguru feels satoru's underlying uncertainty; it's matched by his own, which is perhaps why he's able to relax that much further.]
And yours doesn't? [so far as suguru can tell, it clashes with absolutely everything in this dim and dreary town—something he confirms with another brief once-over, a short hum escaping him as his eyes find their way back to satoru's.] I think I'll pass.
[for now. give him a day or two and he will make a very, very bad decision, but until then he's free to sit here and judge? to reach out for the knob of that cane at last, albeit only to push it back satoru's way. he can only imaging the townspeople and/or passengers satoru has already annoyed with this thing...]
Unless that's your prize.
[bringing this conversation back to its purpose, because honestly, forcing suguru to wear a matching suit sounds like a very satoru thing to do.
(or it would have, anyway. once upon a time.)]
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And that isn't easy to stomach, when inseparable now means something entirely different than it once did. Now, the space between them can only be crossed with a significant amount of thought paid to emotional defenses. Both of them made sacrifices to link themselves together, and they continue to pay the price every time they meet. In this space, Satoru has no choice but to look upon Suguru not for who he once was, but for who he might be at the end of all of this — an inevitability looming before them both.
Old wounds are still so easily opened, never truly healed, raw under every weighted gaze and the tightening of fingers around something they should not have held in the first place.
(Do you? Suguru had asked.
But the truth is it wasn't long enough. Satoru had always wished for more time.)
The impulse is there: Satoru nearly shoves the cane back in Suguru's direction. He almost laughs and reaches for the prize he has in mind, pulling it free as he would have years ago, as though the wound isn't gaping between them. Satoru considers picking because it's easier for him to make the wound worse than acknowledge it at all. Because he's as stuck as Suguru, and when he picks up on Suguru's uncertainty relaxing, his knee-jerk reaction is to double down against his own.
But Suguru reached out to him with a gesture, and Satoru recognizes the game for what it was.
So this is what Satoru does:
He tempers his grin into a measured smile. He pulls back from Suguru's space, leans his cane against the wall, and takes a seat in the chair opposite of him. Whereas he normally would spread himself to take up what minimal space is available, bumping his foot against Suguru's or stretching his arms out on the small table, he contains himself — simply leans back in the chair, keeping all his limbs to himself in the process.
He allows Suguru to refocus them on the topic, and he says:]
Nah, it's nothing that extreme.
[Though Suguru is right; it would have been, those years ago. Satoru would have enjoyed seeing him walk through town in something as loud as his own suit. But back then, Satoru would have been walking alongside him, watching for reactions. Now, he and Suguru operate independently until they have no choice.
The prize itself is therefore simple.]
Your hair tie.
[Satoru doesn't take. He asks. And in doing so, he keeps that line set firmly between them. Because whereas Satoru himself has pulled Suguru's hair tie free many times before — out of curiosity, in an effort to tease, or so he could run his fingers through Suguru's hair with a slow, gentle touch that Satoru would offer to no other — now he simply rests his hand on his side of the table, his palm facing up, a gesture of his own.]
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which should be a relief—and it is, in its way, but something within suguru twists all the same.
(because what suguru always admired about satoru—what suguru liked best—was satoru's refusal to conform. oh, it could be frustrating; suguru was often the bridge, the tether, the person tasked with keeping satoru in check, but wasn't it fun to be swept up in it all? to ignore what was expected and to do what he pleased, if only for a time.)
but this new, subdued version of satoru is what suguru all but demanded in the last car, and thus suguru is forced to accept it. nothing that extreme, satoru says. of course not. maintaining a certain distance is their new "normal."
and that should make satoru's chosen prize—what? simpler? motive- and meaning-free? a hair tie is such a small thing, after all; it's certainly better than satoru requesting the prize he'd missed in the museum car, and yet, as suguru studies him for a moment, suguru considers how strangely intimate an item a hair tie is. something that is worn day in, day out; something that few are ever allowed to touch. he wonders, then, what makes this a worthwhile prize in satoru's mind: its personal nature, or the minor inconvenience it poses...
...but there is satoru's upturned hand, kept at a respectful distance.]
That's all?
[an amused exhale—a not-quite-laugh—as suguru brings a hand to the back of his head, slipping a finger beneath the tie looped about the base of his bun. it doesn't take him long at all to unwind it; a few practiced twists of his wrist and his hair is free, much of it falling forward to frame his face. it's sure to irritate suguru in a day or so, but for now, with the smallest of smiles:]
Trying out a new hairstyle to match your new outfit?
[it could be stunning. but that aside: with his hair tie now dangling from the tip of his pointer finger, suguru stretches forward, entering satoru's space to present his prize—and if suguru lingers? if he chooses not to drop the hair tie, but to press it to satoru's palm with the tips of his fingers, testing the infinity between them? that, too, is a gesture.]
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He told himself it was due to the benign nature of the object — something small and noninvasive, free of the complications that come with Suguru's other, very limited belongings. He figured he'd get a little enjoyment out of seeing Suguru annoyed at his hair falling into his face whenever their paths cross. And it seemed like a harmless way to gloat, free of the tension that could arise from less subtle rewards: Satoru would wear the band around his wrist, Suguru would know it is there, and there would be no repercussions to the way Satoru occasionally hiked up his sleeve to remind him of his win.
But when Suguru reaches behind himself to remove the tie, Satoru's attention is entirely arrested by the way his hair falls free around his face. He finds himself resisting yet another impulse: the desire to reach, to touch, to tuck the strands away.
The last time Satoru saw Suguru with his hair down, Suguru breathed his last.
And maybe that's the reason behind the slight hitch in his chest as Suguru holds the tie between them — as Suguru crosses the line between them to touch. Maybe that's why Satoru's Infinity allows him in without so much as a conscious thought, inviting the contact of his finger against his palm. Maybe that's why Satoru closes his hand before Suguru can pull away, catching both the tie and his finger for a fleeting moment.
Or maybe, for all that Satoru is trying to restrain himself, he can't hold back from asking for a little more — from accepting that which Suguru is giving freely, then chasing it before it fades, seeking to prolong something that, for once, does not feel like it is plucked from the past, but born entirely of the present.
Briefly, Satoru's fingers close, and when he chooses to pull away — capturing the hair tie, but removing himself from Suguru's hand — it is less due to reining himself in than it is the fact that Suguru's touch is cold. And that, too, makes him think of the last time he saw Suguru with his hair down.]
I would...
[He speaks with as playful of a tone as ever, dropping his attention to the hair tie in the center of his palm, opening his hand to reveal the simple prize. Easier to look at the tie itself than to think of the many ways in which he could brush back the burden of unruly hair from Suguru's face. Easier to slip the tie about his wrist than to consider how the loose strands soften Suguru's features, making him appear younger.]
But where's the fun in that?
[To use the tie for its intended purpose would make it functional, a prize claimed for a reason, which takes away from the minor inconvenience of losing it. Hence, it becomes a bracelet for the foreseeable future.
Even the stupidest prizes have a cost, Satoru thinks. And when the band is snug around his wrist, he pulls it taut, then releases it, allowing it to snap against his skin. On the surface, this is as obnoxious of a move as Satoru banging his cane. But this, too, becomes a kind of reminder.
Then he holds his wrist up, still firmly behind the line that exists between them.]
I'll wear it like this.
[And only then does he meet Suguru's eyes again, that smile still on his lips, only smaller now — weakened, when he considers Suguru's hair, Suguru's touch, and the elasticity of a band stretched a little too far.]
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even the smallest indulgences are dangerous, as suguru well knows. they are often the start to something larger, a snowball that grows and grows and grows as it rolls, unchecked, down a steep hill—but suguru sets his sense to the side, for the moment. ignores all that he expects of himself in order to do what seems, feels, fitting, because satoru once again let him in; the least suguru can do is stay.
(while thinking, stupidly, of how easy it would be to twist his hand, fingers finding their way between satoru's. another gesture; a far more meaningful one, at that, but the price is too high, too high.)
satoru, however, remains the responsible one, releasing suguru's fingers after only a few seconds. the briefest touch, as if this is a re-do of, or an apology for, seizing suguru's hand in camp—and suguru should be pleased; he supposes that he is, on some level, but as he draws his hand back to his side of the table, he glances down at it, wondering if this exchange was a step forward or a step back.
but it isn't over, is it? even as he watches satoru slide his prize over his wrist, suguru knows that everything has looped back to him—because there is something almost vulnerable about satoru, now. a sadness that suguru can sense, thanks to his ring, but he never needed that in the past; he could read satoru as easily as anything.
and some things are better left alone; maybe this—them—is one of them, but suguru considers the difference between closing this door between them or leaving it ajar. he could easily do either, depending on how he'd like to move forward; all it would take is the right (or wrong) words.
so.]
Don't break it.
[a mild chide as suguru places his elbow upon the table, resting his chin in the hand that satoru was (almost) holding a few seconds before. satoru's smile shrinks; suguru's smile softens, just barely, before he adds:]
I still have to win it back.
[an offering, small as it is. a tentative way forward.]
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Each game they play returns them to a place that neither of them are meant to occupy; it will do nothing to stave away the inevitability of the end of their arrangement. It will put them at risk. And yet, if Satoru is as honest with himself as he has vowed to be with Suguru, he has no choice but to admit that he missed this. He missed the one and only person who understood him, who complemented him, who knew exactly what to say when Satoru felt less like the strongest and more like someone who might easily crack if given a just right amount of pressure.
Determined as he is to be responsible, to keep himself from pushing too far, there's only one answer that Satoru should give in reply. If Suguru will not shut the door now, before it's too late, then it should fall on to Satoru. All business, no pleasure, no games — Satoru should slam the door shut and look away. But if their time together on this train has proven anything at all, it's that Suguru is still, to this day, Satoru's weakness. Just as the sight of Suguru's body trapped Satoru in the prison realm, these words — this way forward — traps Satoru in a mess of his own making.
He says:]
You could try...
[And playfully trails off, the implication being that he is leaving the door as open as Suguru — that he will accept this tentative way forward, even if this path will prove painful.
Because that soft smile, the way that Suguru looks at him, the tone in which he delivers that comment — it reminds Satoru what it is like to be seen, known, and understood.
After that, the evening stretches on. Satoru eats his questionable meal, plays with Sprinkles, and takes up space in the small shack. Once night falls upon them and it comes time to rest, Satoru decides to stay. The atmosphere between him and Suguru is better after their game and subsequent prize exchange, and he really should rest, considering that this car promises to drain his energy quicker than the others, given the monsters and threats that lurk about. And failing to rest not only means that he could run out of energy, but also that he'll be at risk for contracting the mysterious illness plaguing this car. Rest is more important than ever.
For both of them. Suguru's well-being is also on Satoru's mind, and that's why he decides to mess around with the Happy Home app himself. It's safest for Satoru to stay in the same building as Suguru so he's protected while his technique is down, but it isn't wise for either of them to sleep on the cold floor without sufficient bedding. He therefore attempts to make a shelter of his own so he can bring a mattress, blankets, and any other useful furniture to Suguru's shack.
When he returns ten minutes later, he's empty handed.]
The app crashed.
[And now won't work at all! There's a friendly error message about trying again later, but Satoru is skeptical. This train hasn't exactly proven to have anyone's best interests in mind.
But there's nothing he can do, given the shortages of supplies due to the illness sweeping through the car, except walk over to the bed and take inventory of the blankets and furs. There aren't enough to make a reasonable pallet on the floor, and under normal circumstances, that wouldn't be a huge deal. But with the threats of this car...]
We've got to share.
[He says it with some amusement, although he knows that situation is, once again, too much. They've only barely just repaired what was ripped open when they held hands; to indulge such close proximity again would be foolish.
But they both need to sleep. Neither of them can afford to hit a wall of exhaustion and get sick. They're in this together, and that includes relying on each other's good health.
So! Satoru tosses a pillow at Suguru, attempting to keep things easy between them despite yet another difficult choice.]
You better not snore.
[Satoru is more likely to snore, especially given how hard he'll sleep when he finally manages it, considering all the energy he has to replenish. But once again, it's easier to treat this situation as lightly as the rest.]
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(the risk was not worth it; the mood is too comfortable; suguru has made an incalculable error, because this small indulgence will lead to others. which one will prove to be too much? who will end it, this, them?)
night, however, does fall—and with it, the temperature. the shack makes it marginally more bearable; the thin wooden walls are, apparently, good for something, but by the time satoru decides to step outside and try his luck, suguru has cast surreptitious glance after surreptitious glance toward the bed. it is far too cold for either of them to sleep on the floor, just as it is far too cold to strip many blankets and/or furs from the bed. they do indeed need more of everything...
which means, of course, that they receive absolutely nothing. suguru can't even pretend to be surprised when satoru breezes back inside a few minutes later, showing off the error message on his screen; this is simply how things seem to go for them, which is why he merely hums, nudging at the curse currently stretched out atop his feet. rest is necessary. for both of them. suguru briefly considers pulling out his own phone, just on the offhanded chance there's an option to request something new—
—but. we've got to share, satoru says, following up one bombshell with another—though the pillow is, at least, easier to catch, easier to process. suguru knows what to do with it; suguru does not know what to do with the sudden thought of lying side by side, because when is the last time he's fallen asleep next to anyone? to a fellow adult? he's been far too busy for anything more than the occasional encounter, but those are quick, impersonal; suguru never lingers.
so it's a slight uneasiness he feels, though he knows that sharing this bed is the best option—the only option—for them both. it's only logical—but as he stands, approaching the bed just to place this pillow in what he assumes will be his half of the bed, it's impossible to ignore the memories of sharing a much smaller bed, once. satoru, stealing his blankets; satoru, ignoring a sequence of alarms; satoru, clutching the hem of his shirt.
once they would have fallen into this bed with no hesitation whatsoever. a reflex, really—but now it takes effort to pull down the covers, though he manages a small, somewhat amused huff as he mentally maps out his space. he could say no, and yet, once again:]
I'll keep that in mind.
[a quiet joke, for he recognizes that satoru is also doing what he can to preserve the mood. what's difficult for one is all too frequently difficult for the other; these rings only prove what suguru already knows, so:]
You'd better not steal all the blankets. [it's like another agreement, of sorts. tit for tat! but also, as suguru gets another look at that godawful suit:] Or wear that jacket.
[sprinkles was crawling over satoru earlier, putting its dusty little caterpillar paws all over that outfit, so please, sir. cmon.]
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And it's even more challenging to maintain his good humor if the ring will betray his own lack of surety.
This should be easy. Compared to sleeping outside or sleeping on the floor, sharing a bed shouldn't give either of them pause. It's just a bed, for only one night, and Satoru is tired enough that all of the thoughts that could come with such a scenario should be easily remedied the moment he hits the pillow. But this is yet another situation that forces him to remember the past: the countless times he slept beside Suguru, the whispers spoken late into the night, and the touches meant to comfort, calm, entice.
In the space between Suguru's reply and Suguru's follow-up, Satoru's thoughts wander in the direction of a dangerous question: will there ever be a time that he remembers the past without the pain of what came after? Will he ever be able to look at Suguru without seeing the trail of blood left in his wake, the broken bodies of students, the destruction of a school?
Satoru had to harden his heart once before; now, as he fluffs his own pillow and makes room for himself in Suguru's bed, he finds it increasingly difficult to do. He knew, back when he ended Suguru's life, that Suguru was still painfully human underneath all his atrocious actions and grievous plots — but now he wears the proof around his finger, and feels his humanity keenly. And what choice does Satoru have, except to remind himself, over and over, that he can only help people who want to be saved?
Satoru leaves the ring on his finger. He grins in response to Suguru's words. He makes their bed, and then has no choice but to lie in it — because it's either that, or turning away. And for all Satoru's mistakes — for all this situation is yet another tally — that is the one thing he has never done.
Instead, Satoru seizes the diversion that Suguru provides, releasing the pillow to look down at himself, grabbing the quarters of his suit jacket as if offended.]
What's wrong with it?
[Okay, yeah, he sees the dust marks and casually attempts to wipe them away...and okay, maybe a suit jacket isn't the most ideal sleepwear option, but does Suguru really want him to mess around with the clothing app again?
Actually — Satoru decides that it is a good suggestion, because if the app gives him something even more ridiculous to wear to bed, then neither of them will be thinking about the uncomfortable scenario of sharing a bed. They'll be too distracted by the clothing disaster the app is sure to provide.
So there's no going back now! As he fishes his phone out of his pocket, Satoru glances at Suguru with a look that makes it clear that he expects this to go awry and plans on enjoying it for that reason.
It only takes a few seconds of messing around on his phone, and then!
Well, you know exactly what happens.
And Satoru is visibly delighted by this result, if cold, because they aren't in the least bit appropriate pajamas for a drafty shack. But he's going to suppress a shiver and a subsequent complaint in favor of beaming as he says:]
You're right. This is much better.
[You asked for this, Suguru.]
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and yet.
one problem, so far as suguru can tell, is that distractions are proving more difficult to find—and less effective as a whole. it's simply impossible to ignore just how connected they are; even watching satoru try (and fail) to brush the dust from his jacket—which should be funny, in a way—means spying the ring upon satoru's finger, the hair tie about satoru's wrist. and what else is there to focus on, in this tiny shack? shifting his attention down to the curse winding around his feet means thinking about the ridiculous name it now answers to; pretending to take inventory of the pillows means thinking about how close their pillows will be, once they claim them; absently brushing a lock of hair from his face means thinking about why his hair is loose in the first place. satoru is inescapable.
but as satoru pushes past the mess of emotions they seemingly share, suguru does the same, refusing to allow his vaguely amused smile to slip as satoru catches his eye. that is a mischievous look if suguru has ever seen one, and while that, too, pains him in some small way, he watches satoru tap something on his screen—
—and pop into a pair of pajamas he has no business wearing. furbies? more furbies? this would have sent a younger suguru into the mother of all laughing fits; he would have almost certainly needed to leave the room, but now, as both brows lift:]
Is it? [a dusty suit might have been better, considering the length of leg that is currently on display—but that aside:] ...Maybe it does suit you.
[a clown suit for a clown. very fitting. suguru feels genuine amusement welling within, something he should be grateful for—and yet it's what sends him turning away, a huff of a laugh escaping him as he perches on the edge of the bed. he wants to laugh, to really laugh; he can't allow himself to, so! time, then, to carefully pull his feet free from sprinkles' smothering affection, ostensibly so he can remove his sandals. lightly, easily:]
If you freeze, you only have yourself to blame.
[because wishing for so impractical an outfit is totally satoru's style! if suguru were to use the same app, surely he would, despite this train's meddling, receive something more sensible—which is why he plucks his own phone from his pocket? considers it for a moment before unlocking it simply to hit that one (1) button, following satoru's lead every bit as easily as he once did, and—poof! warm woodsman chic™, which is... a definite relief.
and while suguru had absolutely no control over this, he's absolutely casting a look back over his shoulder.]
See?
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Except, Suguru is kind of right. He did tap those fateful buttons on his phone in hopes of getting a pair of pajamas as jarring as his suit. In a way, he asked for this, and he is feeling a little bit smug as a result of being given yet another eyesore of an outfit. This train car is so dour and the situation with Suguru is so complicated — these pajamas are a much needed means of keeping their situation light, even if he'll suffer for them.
And he is suffering! He's cold! And he feels even colder once Suguru messes with his phone and is given a set of warm and comfortable pajamas. They even look like they fit him, whereas Satoru's are definitely a size too small and therefore not nearly as forgiving as they should be. He's paying the price for his antics yet again, even though this time was out of his hands.
But that isn't going to stop him from laughing out loud — unrestrained, compared to Suguru's attempt at keeping himself reeled in — when he sees that pattern because Suguru may be warm and cozy in that getup but:]
You look like...
[What's the name of that American...give him half a second to remember...]
Paul Bunyan.
[How does he know who this is? Does Satoru play gacha games in his spare time? Maybe...
Cultural knowledge aside, Satoru is only getting colder and he may very well freeze at this rate. So there's really no room for thinking deep thoughts about emotions or the fact that Suguru is going to climb in bed right after him. Satoru takes off his blindfold and sets it and his phone beside the bed. Then he lies down and immediately does what Suguru told him not to do.
He hogs the blankets, wrapping himself in all of them.
Only after he starts warming up a little does he allow himself to think on what — who — will inevitably follow.]
Sprinkles!
[Come get in this bed before Suguru does. Keep both their minds off of everything except a curse taking up too much space in bed, getting its dusty feet on everything...]
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but it makes satoru laugh, and maybe that's what matters, in this moment? even if it does bring about a pain in suguru's chest, something he ignores as he bends down to tuck his matching slippers (nice) out of sprinkles' line of sight. the last thing he needs is this curse eating what is currently his only pair of shoes...
...and the second-to-last thing suguru needs: satoru stealing all of the blankets before he can so much as sit upright. damn.
except that suguru knows this is a distraction tactic, of sorts. satoru buying himself some time, which is why suguru only sighs as he stands, deciding to address this issue after placing his phone on the table (and patting his pockets, feeling for the charm that is both there and, blessedly, muted by the thick fabric). he, at least, is not a heathen; his phone will not go on the floor.
but the price he pays for his kindness is satoru calling sprinkles onto the bed, which—well, of course the curse hops right up? and into suguru's spot, no less, sniffing under the pillow to see if, like, a tasty piece of human is hidden beneath it. hope is all it has these days... surely one day its tasty treat will come...
there is, however, only so much foolishness suguru can tolerate—and so, as he makes his way back to his side of the bed, he gives sprinkles a look.]
Off.
[which is not strictly necessary; a verbal command is not needed, given that suguru controls this curse's will, but it feels fitting? and sends sprinkles scurrying into satoru's space, stomping all over his legs. enjoy that, you cocoon of a man, but also:]
This isn't your bed, [suguru says, holding out a hand in an expectant manner,] and those aren't your blankets. Stop being selfish.
[this is (tired) dad mode.]
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And only so many blankets! But Suguru has the right of it; Satoru is employing a distraction tactic, and the time for such antics is swiftly running out, especially considering Suguru's tone and that hand hovering expectantly beside him.]
But I'm cold.
[A pathetic protest, coupled with an equally pathetic sniffle as Satoru grabs a handful of blanket and thrusts it behind him, blindly seeking Suguru's hand since his back is now to him.
He's cold, and he's not ready for this yet, and neither is Suguru, if that brief pang of pain that Satoru felt a few moments ago is anything to go by. But they've now reached the point where no amount of whining or curse involvement will delay what they need to do. So he gives in, handing over then blankets, then doing his best to shift to the edge of the bed, attempting to give Suguru distance.
And surely Satoru should just close his eyes as Suguru settles in bed. Surely, he knows better than to indulge his desire to chat before sleep, because figurative distance is as important as literal distance.
But he is, regrettably, still himself and thus:]
I was in the woods when you texted.
[Pillow talk...he can't help it.]
Took care of a few monsters.
[This car is dangerous, and maybe that's what he wants to talk about. Or maybe he's looking for some insight into what Suguru has been doing with his time.
Or it could be that Satoru is a glutton for punishment, and just doesn't know when to stop.
Or: all of the above.]
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that's how children are; that's how people are. suguru has always understood this, on some level, which is perhaps why he managed to befriend satoru all those years ago? others wrote satoru off as an annoyance, a lost cause; suguru saw the person beneath the act and realized: oh. so this is how satoru deals with it all.
and this is how satoru deals with—well, with this: by curling into a ball, silent and still. there are, suguru supposes, worse ways to handle this.
but that doesn't make crawling into bed, tugging the blankets over him as he does so, any easier. silence should be a blessing; it feels rather like a curse in this moment, something weighing down his limbs as he gingerly rolls onto his side, his back facing satoru. a necessity—as well as a small comfort, he hopes. a small comfort.
one that is matched, surprisingly enough, by satoru's voice? it shouldn't be a surprise; it very much is, hence the slight delay before suguru offers a quiet:]
Oh?
[which isn't enough; to leave satoru hanging like this would bring an end to this strange comfort, but suguru still takes a moment to shift, pulling the edge of the blanket that much higher. if he concentrates—if he's left alone in silence for too long—he can feel the warm of satoru's calf, so very close to his feet.]
The villagers will be grateful. They haven't had much luck taking care of them on their own. [hmm—] They say there are too many of them in the woods.
[or: suguru spent his day milling about, charming people, birds, and bears into offering him information about their home. he was personable and polite, once; he still can be, when the need arises.]
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He remembers a lot.
He does not remember the last time he and Suguru shared one of their beds, in their space, before Suguru left the school.
It should be a relief, to be spared the burden of a final memory as he lies in Suguru's bed once more. It should be nice, to be given this break, a pause in the endless considerations of how things once were. This is a reprieve: Satoru can shut his eyes and listen to Suguru intone that quiet Oh? without thinking of finalities.
Yet, as he counts the breaths between that single utterance and the statements that he nearly thinks won't follow, the knowledge that he can't remember something so trivial, yet so important, settles in his chest as an ache.
It must have been an inconsequential morning. They must have woken up together in a blur. Satoru was probably late, having snoozed too long, and he probably had to leave in a rush. Maybe Suguru was already long out of bed before Satoru decided to greet the day. Maybe that's why the memory failed to stick.
There are many moments that Satoru failed to understand were important while they were happening. He didn't realize the fleeting nature of significance — the way hindsight would color that which seemed trifling at the time. He didn't realize that Suguru himself was temporary, contingent, as fleeting as all the small details that Satoru would retrace in his mind long after he left — and then long after his death.
Satoru is spared the pain of a final moment that he didn't realize was part of their ending — and that in and of itself is painful. It feels like a loss. It has Satoru wondering: Does Suguru remember? He was always better at slowing down and recognizing moments for what they were, whereas Satoru shoved himself from moment to moment with forward momentum.
(Except for moments like these: when he slowed down to listen to Suguru breathe in and out, when he waited for Suguru's words, when he reached across the gap of mattress between them to clutch Suguru's shirt — to hold him close.)
Now Suguru lies beside him, facing the other way, an impossible distance stretched between them, and Satoru thinks that this too will lead to an end: of their discussion, of Satoru's attempt to converse, and of Suguru's unspoken reply.
But Suguru speaks. Satoru exhales. He closes his eyes and thinks about the slope of Suguru's shoulder, the loose strands of his hair settled across his pillow, the way that Suguru offers what Satoru is seeking. Satoru thinks about Suguru going from villager to villager, gathering information. It reminds him of a time long ago, when he and Suguru would travel to the countryside to exorcise curses, and Suguru would ward off villagers' concerns with a smile and a polite word. He was always better at that than Satoru.]
There're a lot.
[Punctuated by a yawn, Satoru marginally relaxes as he speaks. The conversation eases him in loosening his limbs — still curled, but less defensively, soothed by this talk into accepting the shared bed — and Suguru's proximity.
Satoru could take care of most, if not all of the monsters, if given endless time and cursed energy, but he has neither of those things at his disposal. He has other concerns on his mind, other threats to consider.]
But they've got bigger problems.
[And this is partially why Satoru spent the day in the woods, instead of lingering in town. There are very few things that Satoru can't fight. Give him curses, monsters, and creatures en masse, and he'll emerge victorious. But give him an illness, and Satoru is useless. He never could heal others, and now he can't even heal himself. A plague is an opponent that doesn't respond to power or strength.
He glances over his shoulder, just barely. The motion doesn't grant him sight of Suguru; it serves more as a gesture.]
What do you think we're supposed to be doing?
[What is the objective that seems not to exist? Satoru hasn't paid the objectives much mind up until now, focused as he's been on other matters, but this is one car that warrants a swift exit.]
no subject
(which is why he should simply ask what satoru is thinking? offer satoru a chance to—well. it doesn't matter. once, perhaps, satoru may have provided a flippant answer, attempting to deflect before ultimately allowing suguru in; now, however, satoru will almost assuredly keep suguru out, and for good reason. it's safer this way.)
but satoru once again chooses to speak—and suguru thinks of nanako mumbling his name just before he closed the door, of mimiko sidling up to him to curl her fingers around a few of his. little gestures; little ways to ask for—to admit—what is needed.
what do you think we're supposed to be doing?
not this, suguru is sure. anything but this—and yet he hums all the same, replacing thoughts of satoru with thoughts of nervous villagers. of course he'd wandered by the clinic while exploring the village; he'd spoken, albeit briefly, with a bear reeking of alcohol, lending a sympathetic ear as the bear bemoaned the rising number of patients. monsters on one front, illness on the other—and somewhere in the middle, whispers of dead bodies disappearing in the dead of night. there's a puzzle here, which means the true question should be: is this their puzzle to piece together?
the answer, so far as suguru can tell, is obvious—which is one reason he should respond with a single word: sleeping. end this conversation here; ensure they're both in top form come the morning, when they head back into the world to deal with whatever is thrown their way—and yet.]
Solving them.
[the bed is spacious for one, somewhat cramped for two; suguru shifting over to lay flat on his back means that his shoulder just barely brushes satoru's back, but he does his best to ignore it, focusing instead on the darkness above them—and then, as he catches sight of it from the corner of his eye, the pale glow at the nape of satoru's neck. numbers, barely peeking over the collar of his ridiculous top and further obscured by his messy, messy hair, but—ah.
quietly, then, as suguru turns his head before he can think better of it:]
...So yours are blue.
[fitting! and also very eloquent, suguru.]
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