(you can pm me here or on plurk if you'd like to beforehand, but also if you'd just like to drop something at my doorstep with no preamble please do!!)
[ Maruki lays there on his side, Akechi next to him, little hand patting into his hair, eyes wide, words–
Strange.
Unsettling, almost.
The way kids phrase things can sometimes be creepy even though their intentions are genuine. Their unfiltered view of the world has a tendency to strike more jaded adults oddly when it hits at just the right angle.
In the future, if you hear me again, do your best to listen. It sounds like something he would say, so much so that he can practically hear it in his own voice. Akechi's subconscious conjured a highly accurate version of Maruki for a moment, it seems. It settles over the two of them, oddly heavy, but– comforting, in its way.
He ruffles a hand through Akechi's hair, smiling. ]
Maybe it just meant that you're supposed to listen to me now. I'll remind you of that next time you ignore me.
You called me that, like you do here. And you were a King, so I called you that. But - I think. I don't know. I'm forgetting everything.
[All that time spent wasted papping could've been used to learn how to write well and dream journal this!!! Mamaruki, please. He is trying so hard right now.
And he's trying so hard to continue to relay the dream that felt too real. An episode of a show he stepped into mid-season, without a thought as how to proceed other than to listen.
He never strays far from Maruki - not in the home, not at the park, not in a cozy bed that fits three instead of two.
But he moves closer anyway, until he's warm. Enjoys fingers through his hair. Mimics the gesture with his own small hand.]
We were older too and-
[They were? Weren't? It's fuzzy.]
It was weird. I wanted to be back here, but then - when I was there - I didn't want to go. So I almost forgot to come back.
Well, I do talk too much. Rumi says so, doesn't she?
[ It's an idle response to give him a little more time to think. Maruki flattens his hand out to push all of Akechi's hair back off his forehead, then traces along his hairline, his mind running away with–
What is probably just the strange, subconscious ramblings of a precocious child with a vivid imagination and some adverse life experiences.
But it feels like something more. ]
You didn't want to come home, so you almost forgot to... Where would you have gone instead, do you think? Just stayed in that castle?
[ Just the two of them, older, in a castle, and if Akechi left, Maruki wouldn't be anywhere.
For all of his research on subconscious desires and perceptions, Maruki is hardly adept at dream analysis. He doesn't know what to make of any of it. But he can clearly hear the distress edging into Akechi's voice at the notion of the two of them being separated, and he does understand that.
So he sits up, gathers him up into his arms to stand. ]
You want ramen for breakfast? You know that means you can't have it for lunch and dinner too, right?
[ Maruki holds him close, tight. Doesn't let him go. ]
Maruki pauses where they are in the hall. Leans away just enough to be able to look at Akechi, really look at him. His son – tender-hearted, profoundly, so much so that he cries when he thinks one of his action figures feels ignored – his son, who has seen no shortage of suffering in his young life, been inextricably shaped by it in ways he and Rumi will never be able to undo – hurting anyone else...
It's unthinkable. Beyond the pale. What could possibly put that in his head?
Maruki shifts to hold him in one arm, stronger now than he's ever been thanks to hauling a barnacle of a child around. The other brushes Akechi's overgrown, sleep-mussed hair back off his forehead so he has a clear view of his face. ]
You would never hurt anyone. I know that about you. Did that happen in the dream too?
[ The base of Maruki's skull aches, sudden but dull. He doesn't wince, doesn't want to worry Akechi any more than he's already worked himself up. But he does take a detour on their way to the kitchen, ducks into the bathroom so he can rummage a bottle of ibuprofen out of the medicine cabinet and take it with them. With Rumi gone, he can't afford to get laid flat by one of his headaches.
He shifts Akechi from one arm to the other, opens the fridge to get out a bottle of hojicha. ]
No one was really hurt. I promise.
[ One cup pulled down from the cabinet, then another. Maruki doesn't set him down as he unscrews the cap of the bottle and pours one for each of them. ]
You aren't bad. You could never be bad, not in any reality. [ The ache pulses, throbs, and he moves to try uncapping the medicine one-handed as well. ] It was just a nightmare, Goro.
[Tea is a distraction - the open fridge an ever fascinating affair for a young child who likes seeing what fills the shelves. It's a grocery store and it's his. Sometimes he thinks they're rich.
They move. Akechi's used to it - digs his fingers and palms into Maruki's shirt despite that. It wouldn't matter if Maruki tried to put him down. His dad never does. Akechi prepares regardless.
There's a child lock on the medicine cap - it doesn't stop him from leaning down, one hand moving to grasp the lid. To help. Rests his hand on Maruki's own and tilts his head to the side, far down, to see where the triangles meet on the plastic edge. He can't do it, but he knows how it works. Akechi whispers good job when the lid pops off. Good job..]
Can we call Isshiki-san? If the car hits her - maybe it doesn't because I'm not with her. We can just say hi. Does she like Featherman?
[ Good job to both of them, he couldn't have gotten the cap off without Akechi's help– but then he nearly drops the bottle, fumbling it clumsily as a few pills fly out and scatter across the counter. ]
Isshiki-san...?
[ A name uttered not infrequently in their household, with how glowingly Maruki talks about her nascent field of study, but he hadn't necessarily expected Akechi to pick it up.
No, that's not true. Akechi is nothing if not precocious and highly attuned to everything said and done around him. Maruki did expect him to pick it up. What he didn't expect was for it to feature in dreams. ]
You dreamed about her getting hit by a car? My little prince, that must have been scary...
[ He's getting worked up again. Maruki abandons the pills to smooth a hand over Akechi's hair, soft and calming. ]
It was just a dream. She's okay, I can promise you that.
[ He has to think fast. They absolutely cannot dial up Isshiki Wakaba on a random Tuesday morning, he would be shooting his future point blank if he did. They're colleagues at the university, yes, but she's so far above him in her career trajectory, so much more intelligent and accomplished than he'll ever be– he can't.
But Akechi truly seems upset by it, no matter how much he tries to placate, so...
Two ibuprofen in his mouth, a swig of hojicha to wash it down, and then he's pulling his phone out of his pocket to dial the campus laboratory instead. Just because it's summer doesn't mean people stop working on their research, after all.
One of the grad students that mans the desk picks up; Maruki puts it on speaker phone so Akechi can hear. ]
Haruto-san, good morning. This is Dr. Maruki. I had a quick question for you, is Isshiki-san working in the lab today?
[ A polite request to wait while they check, and then the faint, tinny hold music. Maruki looks over at Akechi with a hopeful smile, raised eyebrows. ]
Even if we can't talk to her, will it be enough to know she's safe and sound at work?
[Oh, this works. This works - he whispers a quiet 'Hello, Haruto-san' over the music.
If she's at work, she's alive. The logic is sound. Maybe he can ask her about bitcoin.]
Okay - yeah, okay.
[And he shoves his face towards the phone, trying to get his ear right on the speaker. He won't miss the 'yes, she's here' or the potential murder charge headed his way.]
If she's not there, am I going to prison?
oh the way i know exactly how i'm gonna end this. die
[ Quick, firm in the parental way that brooks no argument, and punctuated with a kiss to the top of his empty, fluffy head. ]
If I know Isshiki-san, she'll be at work, but even if she's not, we–
[ Ope!! There's Haruto-san again, confirming that she is indeed in the lab, asking if Maruki needs to speak to her. It takes everything in his power not to fluster and blurt out yes actually every single day for hours on end do you think she'll let me add her to the dedications of my first book please thank you. ]
No, I just– [ Wait, he forgot to come up with a plausible excuse for this. ] Just wanted to make sure someone was with the summer students while I'm on leave! [ Nailed... it? ] Thank you very much, Haruto-san.
[ He laughs, soft and musical as he swipes a thumb beneath suspiciously dry eyes. ]
If Isshiki-san and I go to Pizza-La together, I'll bring you and buy every Featherman pizza they have. [ Maruki tickles at his ribs until the persistent worry scrawled across his young features finally melts into laughter too. ] Come on. We have a whole day to do whatever we want!
[ Which means Akechi does get ramen for breakfast. And for lunch. Not for dinner, though; Maruki sets him up on the counter, lets him eat little bits of mushroom as he makes one gigantic okonomiyaki for them to share. Halfway through dinner, Rumi calls from her hotel room as she gets ready to go out for drinks with her colleagues. They chatter with her on speakerphone the whole time, and Maruki keeps waiting for him to mention the dreams, but–
He doesn't. Thank god. Maybe he's forgotten.
Hopefully he's forgotten.
There are tears when Rumi has to go, of course, and reassurances that she'll be home in a couple days, that she'll talk to both of them in the morning. More tears, more reassurances after she's hung up to go about her night; they don't eat another bite after that, and Maruki winds up with a lapful of overemotional, overtired child, clinging and asking again and again if he'll have to go to another home if she doesn't come back.
They wind up in the hall, Akechi in Maruki's arms so he can be held up to the photo of his mother. Then on the floor beneath it, so they can talk quietly about home and family with her still nearby. Then the photo comes off the wall, frame and all, and joins them on the couch, so she can watch Featherman with them before bed. Maruki doesn't know how to say no. Doesn't know how to make it sink in that she never wanted to leave him, and they don't either.
Maybe it will never sink in. Maybe there will always be a piece of his son's heart mired in that pain, and there's nothing he can do about it but hope that he can still love wholly anyway.
A walk down to the conbini for ice cream, a while spent chatting with the neighbor across the hall and her dog on their way back. A bath, a long goodnight to the photo rehung on the wall, a longer one relayed via text message to Rumi. A token attempt at getting Akechi to sleep in his own room, and an easy relenting when he crawls into their bed twenty minutes later.
Maruki tells him stories about a brave prince who could conquer any challenge set before him until he falls asleep tucked under his arm, and when he finally drifts off to sleep himself a couple hours later–
He dreams not of a castle, but of a luxury condo, sleek and minimalist and paid for by a power much higher than either of the people inside.
Akechi kneels on a bathroom floor, forehead resting against forearm slung over the rim of a toilet. He's almost concerningly slight – when I'm older, I don't like to eat that much – and his back heaves as he pants, spluttering and choking on his own saliva as he tries not to retch again.
Maruki kneels right next to him. Dressed smartly – too smartly, nicer than he ever has in his life save for his wedding day, pressed trousers and a crisp white lab coat. Clean-shaven with neat, slicked back hair. He has Akechi's hair gathered gently at his nape, lank with sweat, his other hand wiping a wet cloth gingerly over his mouth and chin before he drops it to rest his palm between his shoulder blades. A quiet shushing, a soothing rub up and down – whatever words he's murmured can't be made out through the dreamtime haze.
A noise rips from Akechi's throat, so loud it only sounds as ringing in his ears. He's pushing away, pressing his back against the glass door of the shower, shaking his head. Maruki stays kneeling in front of him, listens patiently to whatever words tumble from his lips, and he must be at least ten years older than the child tucked safely beneath Maruki's arm, but he looks so young, so frightened in fits and flashes before he tries to school himself out of it.
All they do is talk. Maruki can't hear a word. There's an oppressive near-silence that thrums through the whole of the dream, like bird wings thumping against a cage.
All they do is talk, until a weak sunrise breaks through the window above the shower, and only then does he manage to help Akechi to his feet.
Maruki's eyes flutter open, sunbeams filtering in through an open window in
a shoebox apartment shared by two
a farmhouse during a time of war
a marble-white palace
a fog-covered small town
a traditional tatami room
a rural house blanketed in snow
a lonely shoebox apartment for only one
a cafe in a Tokyo suburb
a little villa in a vibrant European city
a nondescript room in a rehab facility
a castle
the cramped, happy home of the only family he's ever known, and Akechi stirs awake beneath his arm. ]
IT'S MY ETERNAL CURSE TO YOU
BUT HE HAS A REASON. MAMARUKI, OH WOE IS AKECHIS.]
I have to tell you my dream!
[Another side pap!! Rapid fire light tapping against Maruki's cheek!!]
Stay awake, stay awake - I'll make you coffee. I watched Rumi.
THANK GOD!!!!!!
Tell me about your dream first.
no subject
Then pats his hair, as if to say good job.]
I dreamed about you - we were in a castle and you said 'In the future, if you hear me again, do your best to listen.'
But I forgot what you said after, so I didn't listen very well. I think we were rich.
i still cannot fucking believe you
Strange.
Unsettling, almost.
The way kids phrase things can sometimes be creepy even though their intentions are genuine. Their unfiltered view of the world has a tendency to strike more jaded adults oddly when it hits at just the right angle.
In the future, if you hear me again, do your best to listen. It sounds like something he would say, so much so that he can practically hear it in his own voice. Akechi's subconscious conjured a highly accurate version of Maruki for a moment, it seems. It settles over the two of them, oddly heavy, but– comforting, in its way.
He ruffles a hand through Akechi's hair, smiling. ]
Maybe it just meant that you're supposed to listen to me now. I'll remind you of that next time you ignore me.
[ A little tweak to his nose. ]
We were in a castle? Were you a prince?
wdym
[All that time spent wasted papping could've been used to learn how to write well and dream journal this!!! Mamaruki, please. He is trying so hard right now.
And he's trying so hard to continue to relay the dream that felt too real. An episode of a show he stepped into mid-season, without a thought as how to proceed other than to listen.
He never strays far from Maruki - not in the home, not at the park, not in a cozy bed that fits three instead of two.
But he moves closer anyway, until he's warm. Enjoys fingers through his hair. Mimics the gesture with his own small hand.]
We were older too and-
[They were? Weren't? It's fuzzy.]
It was weird. I wanted to be back here, but then - when I was there - I didn't want to go. So I almost forgot to come back.
You said a lot of things.
no subject
[ It's an idle response to give him a little more time to think. Maruki flattens his hand out to push all of Akechi's hair back off his forehead, then traces along his hairline, his mind running away with–
What is probably just the strange, subconscious ramblings of a precocious child with a vivid imagination and some adverse life experiences.
But it feels like something more. ]
You didn't want to come home, so you almost forgot to... Where would you have gone instead, do you think? Just stayed in that castle?
no subject
[Does it sound insane? It's because he's `static` age and rambling about a memory he's forgetting every second he stays awake.]
Rumi wasn't there. Mom wasn't there. It was me and you. When I left, you wouldn't be with me anymore, anywhere. I think that - I don't know.
[It was fun. Terrible. One that makes him relish every affectionate touch to remind him he's loved.]
You put eggs in my ramen and I liked that. Can we have some now?
no subject
For all of his research on subconscious desires and perceptions, Maruki is hardly adept at dream analysis. He doesn't know what to make of any of it. But he can clearly hear the distress edging into Akechi's voice at the notion of the two of them being separated, and he does understand that.
So he sits up, gathers him up into his arms to stand. ]
You want ramen for breakfast? You know that means you can't have it for lunch and dinner too, right?
[ Maruki holds him close, tight. Doesn't let him go. ]
no subject
You said I could - in the other place, you said it was okay. So it's okay here. I promise it's good three times.
[It's literally so good. Stop being a Takuto Debbie DOWNER.]
When I'm older, I don't like to eat that much, so I want to eat it all right now.
[It doesn't make sense. It does. It doesn't matter. He pats the back of Maruki's neck with some little taps.]
I didn't hurt anyone, did I? Do you remember - maybe later. I think I did.
no subject
I think I did.
Maruki pauses where they are in the hall. Leans away just enough to be able to look at Akechi, really look at him. His son – tender-hearted, profoundly, so much so that he cries when he thinks one of his action figures feels ignored – his son, who has seen no shortage of suffering in his young life, been inextricably shaped by it in ways he and Rumi will never be able to undo – hurting anyone else...
It's unthinkable. Beyond the pale. What could possibly put that in his head?
Maruki shifts to hold him in one arm, stronger now than he's ever been thanks to hauling a barnacle of a child around. The other brushes Akechi's overgrown, sleep-mussed hair back off his forehead so he has a clear view of his face. ]
You would never hurt anyone. I know that about you. Did that happen in the dream too?
no subject
[A lot of death on his hands that he doesn't understand. Every second of the non-memory fading away the more he talks. More and more-]
And you weren't there, so I kept doing it. I think that's why. I don't know.
[And he remembers
how they bled in hazy black smoke instead of blood.
Clenches and unclenches his fingers into Maruki's shirt.]But then you were, and you told me to listen for you, and I did. Then I woke up. I hope they're okay.
no subject
He shifts Akechi from one arm to the other, opens the fridge to get out a bottle of hojicha. ]
No one was really hurt. I promise.
[ One cup pulled down from the cabinet, then another. Maruki doesn't set him down as he unscrews the cap of the bottle and pours one for each of them. ]
You aren't bad. You could never be bad, not in any reality. [ The ache pulses, throbs, and he moves to try uncapping the medicine one-handed as well. ] It was just a nightmare, Goro.
no subject
They move. Akechi's used to it - digs his fingers and palms into Maruki's shirt despite that. It wouldn't matter if Maruki tried to put him down. His dad never does. Akechi prepares regardless.
There's a child lock on the medicine cap - it doesn't stop him from leaning down, one hand moving to grasp the lid. To help. Rests his hand on Maruki's own and tilts his head to the side, far down, to see where the triangles meet on the plastic edge. He can't do it, but he knows how it works. Akechi whispers good job when the lid pops off. Good job..]
Can we call Isshiki-san? If the car hits her - maybe it doesn't because I'm not with her. We can just say hi. Does she like Featherman?
no subject
Isshiki-san...?
[ A name uttered not infrequently in their household, with how glowingly Maruki talks about her nascent field of study, but he hadn't necessarily expected Akechi to pick it up.
No, that's not true. Akechi is nothing if not precocious and highly attuned to everything said and done around him. Maruki did expect him to pick it up. What he didn't expect was for it to feature in dreams. ]
You dreamed about her getting hit by a car? My little prince, that must have been scary...
no subject
[They need to call the POLICE KING.]
The koban will know what to do.
no subject
It was just a dream. She's okay, I can promise you that.
[ He has to think fast. They absolutely cannot dial up Isshiki Wakaba on a random Tuesday morning, he would be shooting his future point blank if he did. They're colleagues at the university, yes, but she's so far above him in her career trajectory, so much more intelligent and accomplished than he'll ever be– he can't.
But Akechi truly seems upset by it, no matter how much he tries to placate, so...
Two ibuprofen in his mouth, a swig of hojicha to wash it down, and then he's pulling his phone out of his pocket to dial the campus laboratory instead. Just because it's summer doesn't mean people stop working on their research, after all.
One of the grad students that mans the desk picks up; Maruki puts it on speaker phone so Akechi can hear. ]
Haruto-san, good morning. This is Dr. Maruki. I had a quick question for you, is Isshiki-san working in the lab today?
[ A polite request to wait while they check, and then the faint, tinny hold music. Maruki looks over at Akechi with a hopeful smile, raised eyebrows. ]
Even if we can't talk to her, will it be enough to know she's safe and sound at work?
no subject
If she's at work, she's alive. The logic is sound. Maybe he can ask her about bitcoin.]
Okay - yeah, okay.
[And he shoves his face towards the phone, trying to get his ear right on the speaker. He won't miss the 'yes, she's here' or the potential murder charge headed his way.]
If she's not there, am I going to prison?
oh the way i know exactly how i'm gonna end this. die
[ Quick, firm in the parental way that brooks no argument, and punctuated with a kiss to the top of his empty, fluffy head. ]
If I know Isshiki-san, she'll be at work, but even if she's not, we–
[ Ope!! There's Haruto-san again, confirming that she is indeed in the lab, asking if Maruki needs to speak to her. It takes everything in his power not to fluster and blurt out yes actually every single day for hours on end do you think she'll let me add her to the dedications of my first book please thank you. ]
No, I just– [ Wait, he forgot to come up with a plausible excuse for this. ] Just wanted to make sure someone was with the summer students while I'm on leave! [ Nailed... it? ] Thank you very much, Haruto-san.
[ Whew. Phone call ended. Millennial anxiety abated. Maruki looks at Akechi again, eyebrows raised. ]
If you have a dream like that again, tell me, okay? But you're alright. I promise.
stares into the sun. kill me whenever.
He could cry - almost does. A balled up fist rubs at his eyes so he doesn't. He's literally so grown. ]
I will - okay. I won't be - I'm really happy. Now you two can go to Pizza-La together - it's okay. I'll buy it for you. I have 100 yen.
[They're gonna be able to share a sick slice of pizza with that dough.]
Oh, wait. I dropped it yesterday. Um - I'll find it, and then you can have pizza. I'll find it before you have to pay bills.
no subject
If Isshiki-san and I go to Pizza-La together, I'll bring you and buy every Featherman pizza they have. [ Maruki tickles at his ribs until the persistent worry scrawled across his young features finally melts into laughter too. ] Come on. We have a whole day to do whatever we want!
[ Which means Akechi does get ramen for breakfast. And for lunch. Not for dinner, though; Maruki sets him up on the counter, lets him eat little bits of mushroom as he makes one gigantic okonomiyaki for them to share. Halfway through dinner, Rumi calls from her hotel room as she gets ready to go out for drinks with her colleagues. They chatter with her on speakerphone the whole time, and Maruki keeps waiting for him to mention the dreams, but–
He doesn't. Thank god. Maybe he's forgotten.
Hopefully he's forgotten.
There are tears when Rumi has to go, of course, and reassurances that she'll be home in a couple days, that she'll talk to both of them in the morning. More tears, more reassurances after she's hung up to go about her night; they don't eat another bite after that, and Maruki winds up with a lapful of overemotional, overtired child, clinging and asking again and again if he'll have to go to another home if she doesn't come back.
They wind up in the hall, Akechi in Maruki's arms so he can be held up to the photo of his mother. Then on the floor beneath it, so they can talk quietly about home and family with her still nearby. Then the photo comes off the wall, frame and all, and joins them on the couch, so she can watch Featherman with them before bed. Maruki doesn't know how to say no. Doesn't know how to make it sink in that she never wanted to leave him, and they don't either.
Maybe it will never sink in. Maybe there will always be a piece of his son's heart mired in that pain, and there's nothing he can do about it but hope that he can still love wholly anyway.
A walk down to the conbini for ice cream, a while spent chatting with the neighbor across the hall and her dog on their way back. A bath, a long goodnight to the photo rehung on the wall, a longer one relayed via text message to Rumi. A token attempt at getting Akechi to sleep in his own room, and an easy relenting when he crawls into their bed twenty minutes later.
Maruki tells him stories about a brave prince who could conquer any challenge set before him until he falls asleep tucked under his arm, and when he finally drifts off to sleep himself a couple hours later–
He dreams not of a castle, but of a luxury condo, sleek and minimalist and paid for by a power much higher than either of the people inside.
Akechi kneels on a bathroom floor, forehead resting against forearm slung over the rim of a toilet. He's almost concerningly slight – when I'm older, I don't like to eat that much – and his back heaves as he pants, spluttering and choking on his own saliva as he tries not to retch again.
Maruki kneels right next to him. Dressed smartly – too smartly, nicer than he ever has in his life save for his wedding day, pressed trousers and a crisp white lab coat. Clean-shaven with neat, slicked back hair. He has Akechi's hair gathered gently at his nape, lank with sweat, his other hand wiping a wet cloth gingerly over his mouth and chin before he drops it to rest his palm between his shoulder blades. A quiet shushing, a soothing rub up and down – whatever words he's murmured can't be made out through the dreamtime haze.
A noise rips from Akechi's throat, so loud it only sounds as ringing in his ears. He's pushing away, pressing his back against the glass door of the shower, shaking his head. Maruki stays kneeling in front of him, listens patiently to whatever words tumble from his lips, and he must be at least ten years older than the child tucked safely beneath Maruki's arm, but he looks so young, so frightened in fits and flashes before he tries to school himself out of it.
All they do is talk. Maruki can't hear a word. There's an oppressive near-silence that thrums through the whole of the dream, like bird wings thumping against a cage.
All they do is talk, until a weak sunrise breaks through the window above the shower, and only then does he manage to help Akechi to his feet.
Maruki's eyes flutter open, sunbeams filtering in through an open window in
a farmhouse during a time of war
a fog-covered small town
a rural house blanketed in snow
a cafe in a Tokyo suburb
a nondescript room in a rehab facility
the cramped, happy home of the only family he's ever known, and Akechi stirs awake beneath his arm. ]