hikaru shindou ⑤ (
protential) wrote2013-09-12 10:29 pm
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it gets lonely to feel things all by yourself.
(continued from here.)
[It wouldn't take more than a minute to get those directions. Two minutes at max. Touya doesn't have to stick around here if he doesn't want to. Hell, Touya could've just sent him the directions via email and wouldn't have had to come over here at all. It isn't the fucking Stone Age anymore; there are search engines where two addresses are all you need to figure out where you're supposed to go. Touya came here under a kind of ridiculous pretense, Hikaru thinks, now that he's thinking about it, but he isn't going to bring that up just yet. Touya relies on pretenses as much as anyone else, projecting purpose and aplomb even when he feels anything but. It took Hikaru a while to realize that most people never see the other sides of Touya for themselves. Go Weekly crows about his stupid stately manner every other week, which Hikaru reads about and has to roll his eyes at. Everyone wears masks, with one for pretty much every occasion... Touya's masks are just more convincing and firmly attached. But, right now, Hikaru can see why most people cringe when they're stuck between Touya and his destination. Touya has this freaky laser-sighted precision when it comes to doing what he set out to do. It's just, in this case...
In this case, Hikaru is the destination, and he's glad for the towel that's covering most of his face. Touya can't see his own reddened cheeks, or the half-opened state of his mouth, the restless shift of his tongue beyond his teeth. I came for your room, delivered in that aerial voice, might as well be, I came for you. Hikaru remembers something randomly, then, just a random phrase, as Touya ascends the stairs in front of him: Home is where the heart is. That's a very sentimental thing for him to think--it's pretentious, too. But it's what he's thinking as he follows Touya up to his bedroom.
It doesn't look much different from how it looked yesterday. His goban has been cleared of that final, unfinished game, however. Over in the one corner, his previously unremarkable desk is more visible, serving as a pseudo-filing cabinet for important paperwork. The smell of incense is completely gone, thanks to Touya's psychotic airing out of his confines. In its place, there's something fainter, gentler on one's sanity, resembling a waft of sea breeze at dawn. It can be traced back to the pale scented candle Hikaru placed on the windowsill at some point. And his bedding is just as fresh and clean, no longer a miserable hovel, in a cloudier shade of blue. Like a day at the beach in the middle of winter.
Letting the towel drape around his neck, Hikaru goes over to the desk to grab a pen and a yellow notepad for Touya to write the directions on. He also picks up a notebook of blank kifu paper, since he might as well record their game while Touya is here. It still feels so dreamlike that he wants to make sure he's remembering it right.]
Man, Touya, you make it sound like I'm completely helpless. I would've figured out where to go with or without him. [It might just have taken him another hour of wandering around to get there. He glances over his shoulder at Touya, then at his goban, then back to Touya...] Anyway, I'd give you the grand tour, but what you see is what you get. [He drops the pen and notepad in front of Touya, then sits down at an angle from him, not directly opposite. No defaulting to seiza when his knees still kind of hurt...
In general, the bath must have been good for him, because he doesn't look so exhausted, greasy, or grimy, or like he'd crumble to pieces at a single touch. Only his longstanding sleep debt is there in the bruises under his eyes (they're a darker green, a forest green, right now).
Dryly:] Are you impressed yet?
[It wouldn't take more than a minute to get those directions. Two minutes at max. Touya doesn't have to stick around here if he doesn't want to. Hell, Touya could've just sent him the directions via email and wouldn't have had to come over here at all. It isn't the fucking Stone Age anymore; there are search engines where two addresses are all you need to figure out where you're supposed to go. Touya came here under a kind of ridiculous pretense, Hikaru thinks, now that he's thinking about it, but he isn't going to bring that up just yet. Touya relies on pretenses as much as anyone else, projecting purpose and aplomb even when he feels anything but. It took Hikaru a while to realize that most people never see the other sides of Touya for themselves. Go Weekly crows about his stupid stately manner every other week, which Hikaru reads about and has to roll his eyes at. Everyone wears masks, with one for pretty much every occasion... Touya's masks are just more convincing and firmly attached. But, right now, Hikaru can see why most people cringe when they're stuck between Touya and his destination. Touya has this freaky laser-sighted precision when it comes to doing what he set out to do. It's just, in this case...
In this case, Hikaru is the destination, and he's glad for the towel that's covering most of his face. Touya can't see his own reddened cheeks, or the half-opened state of his mouth, the restless shift of his tongue beyond his teeth. I came for your room, delivered in that aerial voice, might as well be, I came for you. Hikaru remembers something randomly, then, just a random phrase, as Touya ascends the stairs in front of him: Home is where the heart is. That's a very sentimental thing for him to think--it's pretentious, too. But it's what he's thinking as he follows Touya up to his bedroom.
It doesn't look much different from how it looked yesterday. His goban has been cleared of that final, unfinished game, however. Over in the one corner, his previously unremarkable desk is more visible, serving as a pseudo-filing cabinet for important paperwork. The smell of incense is completely gone, thanks to Touya's psychotic airing out of his confines. In its place, there's something fainter, gentler on one's sanity, resembling a waft of sea breeze at dawn. It can be traced back to the pale scented candle Hikaru placed on the windowsill at some point. And his bedding is just as fresh and clean, no longer a miserable hovel, in a cloudier shade of blue. Like a day at the beach in the middle of winter.
Letting the towel drape around his neck, Hikaru goes over to the desk to grab a pen and a yellow notepad for Touya to write the directions on. He also picks up a notebook of blank kifu paper, since he might as well record their game while Touya is here. It still feels so dreamlike that he wants to make sure he's remembering it right.]
Man, Touya, you make it sound like I'm completely helpless. I would've figured out where to go with or without him. [It might just have taken him another hour of wandering around to get there. He glances over his shoulder at Touya, then at his goban, then back to Touya...] Anyway, I'd give you the grand tour, but what you see is what you get. [He drops the pen and notepad in front of Touya, then sits down at an angle from him, not directly opposite. No defaulting to seiza when his knees still kind of hurt...
In general, the bath must have been good for him, because he doesn't look so exhausted, greasy, or grimy, or like he'd crumble to pieces at a single touch. Only his longstanding sleep debt is there in the bruises under his eyes (they're a darker green, a forest green, right now).
Dryly:] Are you impressed yet?
no subject
It wasn't like this when he was staying over here prior to the Hokuto Cup. They were all on edge, really nervous, ready to assign blame, but Touya floated like a cloud from room to room, in his natural element. Touya wasn't trying to break the floorboards with his feet. He didn't sound like his own angry stampede. Even the swirly, unresolved memories of last night tell Hikaru all he absolutely needs to know. If not the whole getting drunk thing, then the stuff he said while they were drunk must have pissed Touya right the fuck off. Disgusted him, surely. Touya looked like he couldn't wait to get away from Hikaru, as far away as possible.
Touya calls to him, then, demanding toast, and that's the whip crack across his heart that forces him to sit up, wide-eyed, like he's expecting another strike. Then it's quiet again, aside from the running water in the other room. Hikaru nearly withers down to his roots, before deciding he can't give up so easily here. It isn't until he's crawled on all fours into the kitchen that he attempts to stand back up again. As he moves upward, his clothing sticks to him in odd places from sweat gone dry and also drags over and across him, all wet friction, from fresh sweat coming in. It's just too damn hot in this house, he thinks. More like a fucking sauna-- Opening the refrigerator feels like he's stepped across the world and arrived at the Himalayas. It feels incredible, wonderful; the stuff of legends. He sags against the door and basks in the wafting frost for at least a full minute.
The toaster itself looks like it's as modern as ever, thank god. He makes four pieces of toast without setting fire to anything. Then he realizes he has no idea if Touya wants butter or jelly or something on his toast, and he doesn't know if Touya will freak out if he doesn't get what he wants. Back in the fridge, he discovers it's pretty well stocked with all sorts of spreadables, so much so that he has to wonder if this is all the Touyas fucking eat. Probably admirers of Touya-sensei's from all over the world have sent them various things to try out. No coherent family could want strawberry and lychee and margarine and cream cheese and peanut butter all at the same time. There's even a canister of Vegemite that smells like black death when Hikaru checks on it. He very nearly throws up on the floor of Touya's kitchen.
Instead of trying to figure out what Touya likes, he just brings out a tray with the plate of toast and a dozen of the available spreads. He sets it down on the dining table and squints at it, thinking it looks more than a little insane, like he's having breakfast with the Mad Hatter. His blinding headache doesn't give him any better ideas, though. Now he's taken care of all of that, and Touya is still whiling away in the bath... He should probably get out of here. He should leave. But if he left right now, behind Touya's back, it'd probably be worse for him in the long run. Sometimes you just have to sit down and face the music. Some games you're just going to lose, no matter what you do. That's why he reaches for his backpack and retrieves his phone, powering it back on.
So, thankfully, nothing is on fire when Touya returns from washing up, dressed in clothing for comfort's comfort. Hikaru, though, is sitting in front of the table, his phone pressed to his ear, and his other hand grinding through his hair like he's trying to tear it out by the roots. The bent arc of his back makes him look, frankly, devastated. Just exhausted, beyond exhausted, but also like he has to carry something even heavier for another thousand miles.] I know, [he says, low and miserable, in the middle of what sounds like a root canal with no anesthetic.] I know, I know. I know he wants to talk to me when he gets home. I know that. I'm sorry. I'm... yeah, I know that. I'll apologize to them, too. I know they're--I know, Mom, you don't have to say it like that. I'm just-- [And the call seems to end there, because he doesn't say anything else. She hung up on him. That much of a guilt trip, and she's the one hanging up on him. Fucking whatever.
He avoids Touya's gaze while he picks up his backpack and quickly, quietly, drags it and also himself all the way to the bathroom.
It doesn't take him too, too long to finish up in there, even though he likewise wants to linger. He emerges from the fragrant steam in the pajamas he was supposed to wear last night, just a grey shirt on grey plaid for pants, monochromatic and unoffensive for it. With him, in a tense grip, he's carrying a bottle of aspirin that he found in their medicine cabinet. He sets it down beside Touya's elbow without saying a word. A peace offering, maybe. Or maybe it's common sense. Then he sits down a respectable distance from Touya, one hand already moving to shield his burning, bloodshot eyes from more sunlight.
Finally, the rattling of an old radio:]
No one should have that many jams and jellies in their fridge.
no subject
But he's been particularly harsh so far, upon waking, hasn't he. Shindou looked cowed by him, which maybe, might have been the goal? But Akira didn't feel good about it. There was no satisfaction to be had in seeing that Shindou feels so awful. Shindou may be an irresponsible idiot, pushing the both of them too far with the sake last night, but anything after that was...
All Akira knows is he fell hard into dreams all hot and sticky, dreams where he said outrageous things to Shindou, dreams where Shindou told him things that made him feel like moaning. He can only be relieved that neither of them would ever have said things like that out loud for real. Akira can remember hearing himself talk, but not what it felt like coming out of his mouth, so... dreams, all hot and sticky. He rubs his face.
While Shindou is in the bath, Akira eats two of the pieces of toast, and then the other two. He makes four more, and eats one of those slices, too. While he's in the kitchen, his hand passes over a bowl of oranges on the counter, but he thinks he'd be sick if he tried to eat one of those.
Close to half of the various spreads have been uncapped, when Shindou returns from washing up. Akira sets down his coffee, his mug hitting the table a little too hard, as if startled. Jams and jellies. Akira doesn't have an answer for that. He just doesn't know what to say to it. He purses his lips, and then he rubs at his face again, more harshly this time... he sighs into his palms, too, a big rush, shoulders dropping.
Finally, he sets his elbows on the table, and settles his hands at either side of his face, his fingers pushing up into stray strands of hair. He looks across the way to Shindou, regret and remorse dimpling one corner of his mouth.] Do you feel any better? [Thankfully, he sounds less like a vengeful killer. Very tired, throat dry, but not reaching for a knife. Then, although he doesn't want to, he says,] Your mother must have been worried.
[He means that—must. As in, he'd like to demand it of her. He kept her son out all night, well into the next morning, no calls, no... he couldn't hear what she was saying, but he did hear her voice, from over the phone. That's how loud she was. Shindou had looked like a pressing of flowers: thinned out, lacking life, and squashed between too many heavy things. Akira exhales thinly, pushing one of his hands up against his forehead, his bangs in disarray.]
Eat some of this.
[He was supposed to say, "I'm sorry," but he's pushing the plate of toast toward Shindou, instead, before he reaches for the aspirin.]
no subject
For whatever reason, Touya asks him if he feels any better. His lips come part--and it's audible to his ears, that's how sensitive he is--even before he knows what to say. Then he says,] I feel like a truck ran over me, then backed up, then ran over me again. [Touya, on the other hand... even with his dry eyes, his discolored skin, his hair pulled up all slapdash and damp... even with all of that, he looks like he's ready to tackle anything. Hell, he could go sit for a match and still probably beat the poor bastard who has to deal with him.]
My mother...
[Hikaru starts to shake his head, but he can tell that's only going to give him motion sickness. He stops, sighs to himself, and then swallows the thought entirely. The last time his mother yelled at him like that, it was when he had crossed the road without her permission and almost got hit by a car. Six years old, if he remembers right. Additional proof he's always been an irresponsible piece of shit.
He sighs again and moves his hand away, looking down at the pieces of toast. He looks at them like they've personally wronged him somehow. Then, dubiously, he picks up one piece. He sets it back down.] I'm not hungry, Touya. [Then he picks it up again and starts nibbling along the crispiest edge. No spreads for him. No jams or jellies. Anything more flavorful than this would make his stomach fight its way out of his body.
Oh, that thought from before is bubbling back up his throat, as painful as a wash of stomach acid.]
She told me to apologize for... [How did she put it, again? Oh, yeah:] imposing myself on your hospitality.