Showing posts with label one-shot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label one-shot. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

[Underneath] [a Zero Kiryuu one-shot for AyaNara's contest]


Class was always boring, but today it was exceptional. You were sitting with your notebook on your lap, ripping a page into tiny, blue-lined pieces and stacking them as high as they would go until they slid down each other and formed an ever-growing pile. The paper felt dry and uncomfortable on your hands and you really wanted lotion or something to hydrate them, but you didn't have any, and so you rubbed your fingers together and sighed. Your eyes drooped with exhaustion and things blurred and then returned to clarity, on and off, making the world oscillate.

"Please answer question seven on the board," the teacher said. "Make it an entry in your notebooks."

Some of the class groaned and you looked up, the world coming back into focus, too sharp and the contrasts too extreme. You blinked a few times to clear your head and pull yourself up out of the overwhelming need to close your eyes and never open them again. You put your notebook and the pile on your desk area and gingerly picked your pencil up. The movement made you cringe.

The dark bruises on your wrist moved with your skin and everything was sore. Both wrists were, actually, and you lifted the other to examine it. The previous evening had been spent trying to find gauze because the blood wouldn't clot, had become too thin, and the bleeding wouldn't stop, so it dripped down your arm and stained your sheets and you had a panic attack and dug around in your bathroom cabinet on your hands and knees for an hour looking for anything to stem the bleeding. You had had help, though the help was too distracted to be of much use.

Now your right wrist was wrapped very tightly in gauze and medical tape. People asked about it all day and you told them it was from slamming it in the door. The left wrist was bare, non-bandaged, but mottled with dark spots. You lifted both wrists closer to your face to examine them.

The sound of someone dropping their pencil and swearing brought you back. You shook your head to brush away the sleep and the headache and picked your pencil up again, beginning to scribble an answer to a question you didn't bother to think about.

Someone leaned into your line of sight. You blinked up at them and smiled softly. Yuki smiled back. "Tired?" she asked.

You nodded and shrugged. "Yeah, a little."

"Only a little?" She looked skeptical but it was quickly covered up by sympathy. "Me too. I had a lot of work last night."

You opened and closed your mouth silently. "I did too, I guess," you mumbled, tucking your hair behind your ear nervously. She smiled at you encouragingly and you smiled back, not wanting to turn her away. This conversation was keeping you awake.

She looked over and you followed her gaze. Zero was sitting in the row in front of you, a few seats to your left. He was staring into lower middle space blankly, his eyes glazed over and dull. Every so often, he would close his eyes and take a deep, slow breath, as though trying to exercise control over some internal conflict. He looked about as exhausted as you were.

Yuki was looking at you and you knew this, but Zero kept your attention for a little longer. After a moment, you glanced at her. She was looking you up and down. "You alright?" she whispered.

"Okay," the teacher said. "We're moving on."

The other students picked up talking and the room buzzed with unrest. Yuki looked uncomfortable suddenly and stared at her notebook in concentration. You watched her look away and glanced at your pile of papers on the desk and then at your wrists. You sighed and hunched over in your chair, eyes drooping shut and the world going black briefly before you opened them and everything was bright.

Class was let out ten minutes later, and you were packing your things slowly as people filed past you.

"_________," Yuki said. You looked up at her. "Are you doing anything tonight? After my shift, you can come over to my room and we can study." She lifted her book for reference, but there was something on her face that looked like hope--a desperate but strong hope.

You opened your mouth to reply and saw the darkness, the bedroom, the hands on your body and felt the press of warmth to your neck, all very vividly and then you felt guilty. She must have seen it on your face, because when you said, "I can't, I'm sorry," she didn't look upset, only worried.

"It's okay," she assured you. "We can study some other time. During the day or something."

"Yeah," you said, "we'll talk about it." You smiled at her. "Sorry, really."

"No, I get it. It's important," she said, waving her hands in front of her. She sighed and adjusted her bag. "Next class?"

"Sure." You stood and numbness exploded through your head. You stumbled a bit and pressed a hand to your forehead, watching as silver fireworks drifted in from the corners of your eyes.

"_________? Are you okay?" Yuki was staring at you oddly. You stared back, confused.

"Yeah, yeah, I'm just tired," you mumbled, letting your hand drop to your side. You breathed the tightness out in a long breath and moved to exit the class. She followed you closely. At the doorway, people were standing about and talking. Yuki swore under her breath and you could tell she was about to yell at them to scram.

A hand pressed gently to your upper back. You jumped and didn't even bother to look over your shoulder. Zero must have been frowning because the students fell silent and shifted out of the way, looking sheepish and Yuki muttered something about calming down.

"I have math," she said distractedly, reaching over and placing a hand on your arm. You looked at her hand and then at her. She was staring into your face with a fierce openness, full of questions and answers and comfort. You stared back and Zero pressed closer, his hand sliding down to rest on your waist.

"Me too," you said, feeling highly uncomfortable in the middle of the hall like that. "I'll be there in a second--"

"This happens every day," she whispered, her brown eyes wide and serious. You just nodded and shrugged.

"I don't know," you mouthed and shook your head.

"Yuki, just let her go," Zero said, the familiar possessiveness filling his tone out like a balloon. He sounded stressed, on edge, but he always was, especially in the middle of the day. His hand dropped away from your body but you knew he was clenching his fists and they were staring at each other in irritation.

"You need to let her go," she hissed quietly, eyes narrowing. You turned at this and saw his purple eyes light with an angry fire, his usually serene expression contorting into a snarl. You grimaced and reached out to touch his arm but pulled your hand away.

"I'll be there in a second, Yuki," you told her, sending her a placating smile. She smiled back and nodded. You turned and walked down the hallway toward the staircase. Behind you, you could hear Zero and Yuki biting comments at each other before Zero said, "You don't even know what you're talking about, Yuki," in a harsh, hurt tone.

You rounded the corner and threw your bag down on the floor. The marble felt cool on your skin and you pressed your cheek to the wall and closed your eyes for a second. You were too tired for thinking and learning and conversation, and especially conversation with those two.

Just as you were gathering your last bits of energy to head off to class, Zero walked around the corner and immediately his expression melted from anger to relief, and it happened so quickly you didn't even notice it until you saw the very familiar glaze of euphoria in his eyes. He was beside you before you could register it and you stared up at him warily.

"_________," he said, almost murmured, and leaned down to wrap his arms around you. You stood very still as he did this, feeling his warmth and his breathing and his face pressed to your neck.

"I have class," you said as a reminder, trying not to speak too loudly into his ear. He backed you up and pressed you to the wall. You blinked at him as he pulled back and stared into your eyes.

He was so beautiful you wanted to cry. Always, he was, and especially now, when he was so close, only inches away. You didn't quite know what to do with yourself for a moment.

"It'll only be a little," he said, voice lilting and quiet. You went to shake your head and object and he must have seen this because he leaned down and pressed his lips to yours. You felt resistance drain out of you. His arms were tight and his weight pressed you into the wall, not uncomfortably, and his mouth was warm and gentle as it moved against yours. You felt fuzzy and hot and jellylike.

The whole world came back in a rush when he slid his hand up your neck to bury it in your hair. Your eyes snapped open and you had a difficult decision to make, only it wasn't so difficult: should you stop this and ruin his mood when he was already so fragile and, really, you didn't mind standing there in the hall and kissing him because if there was one thing Zero was exceptionally good at besides all the fighting it was kissing? Or should you continue this and not go to class and get detention and drive yourself a little bit crazy with all of his sex-appeal and him completely insane because even after all this seduction you were still going to say no?

You pushed at his chest a bit and he made a sound of displeasure, a slight sigh into your mouth, and pulled back, licking his lips slowly while he gazed into your eyes. You reddened and cleared your throat.

"I have class," you said again, trying to push the tremor out of your voice. The bell rang. You pointed at the ceiling. "See?"

Zero didn't say anything, but pulled you tightly to his chest and kissed you again. This time, you got out of it in time before he dragged you under. You pulled away immediately and shook your head, pushing back on his chest. He sighed and loosened his hold on you.

"I only need a little," he whispered.

"It's never a little--"

"_________..." The pain was there on his face, right there, and you frowned. He swore and closed his eyes, lifting a hand to cover his mouth. You hissed a breath out through your teeth. You placed a hand on his chest and opened your mouth to speak but he beat you to it. "_________, please," he whispered, eyes glittering and dark.

You cringed. You couldn't stand the pleading and the begging, and especially when it degraded into tears and you were about as much of a mess as he was, trying to calm him down, running your fingers through his silver hair and holding his face in your hands and kissing him, anything to get him to stop.

That wasn't about to happen, but it could, and you felt it. "Zero," you said carefully. He was still staring deeply into your eyes. "It's too much," you told him. "I'm tired and exhausted and... it's too much."

His amethyst eyes widened momentarily before he reached into his pants pocket and withdrew a bottle. "Here," he said, quickly handing you the bottle and closing your fingers around it. You knew what they were; you'd taken them before.

You looked at the clear orange container and opened and closed your mouth a few times silently. "I've taken so many of these," you whispered, looking up at him. "It's not healthy, I don't think..."

He moved very close to you and you could see the wash of desperation in his eyes. "_________," he murmured. "I need this. Please, just a little. I'll be very gentle."

He was always gentle. "No, Zero, I can't. Not right now. I..." You sighed and ran a hand through your hair. "I'm not too sure I'll be able to at all today."

"Why?" He whispered this, tone laced with longing and devastation and confusion. When you opened your mouth to reply, he reached a hand out and caressed your face.

You felt the tingle and shivered. "I-I'm too tired," you told him. "I just need sleep. You need sleep. I couldn't sleep at all last night, Zero, you know that."

His beautiful eyes melted into sorrow. "I know, I know. I'm sorry. __________, I'm sorry." He kept stroking your cheek with his thumb and now he leaned in to kiss your mouth softly, lingeringly. You let it happen and watched as he pulled back. "I'll be better tonight. We can sleep. I just need..." His eyes fluttered shut and he sighed deeply. "I just need some now, to get me through," he said.

The bruises on your wrists throbbed in response to your sudden spike in anxiety. When it got bad, he forgot about being secretive and just went for it, and thus far nothing bad had happened but you were always nervous someone was going to walk in on a very messy scene that would be impossible to understand.

You frowned and looked down at your bandaged wrist. "I don't think that would be good. I shouldn't even be in school right now."

He looked down at your wrist, too, and took it, bringing it closer to him, where he turned it over gently and examined the gauze. He cursed, suddenly very angry with himself, and looked down at the ground. You could see his eyes close momentarily as he took a deep breath in. "I'm sorry, _________. Last night was... I was bad, okay? I was weak." His voice had become a broken whisper and now he stared at you with a fierce intensity, eyes glittering.

You wanted to tell him it wasn't about being weak. He hadn't been weak, he'd been disoriented and upset, and you shouldn't have let him drink from you in the first place. And you had known enough to not let him take from your neck, which is what he always preferred--it had been hard enough coaxing him to take from your wrist when he was so voracious and emotional that it hadn't even occured to you to not let him take from you at all. It had been your responsibility to not let him get carried away but sometimes you got carried away, and that's where things went badly.

"It's okay," you wanted to say, but then he raised your wrist to his mouth and kissed it and you didn't say anything at all.

"I won't take from here. You can tell me where."

"That's not the issue, Zero."

"Then what?" he asked desperately. "________, what do I need to do?"

You shook your head helplessly. "Wait, just wait. I mean, I'm so tired right now, Zero, it'd be the worst thing. And I lost so much blood last night..."

He looked pained. "I'm sorry," he whispered, pulling you tightly to his chest, where he held you with his face buried in your hair. One of his hands ran up and down your back and you felt exhausted suddenly, just unable to move. His body was so warm and his movements and breathing so rhythmic, and you closed your eyes and melted a little and leaned into him and the two of you just stood there like this.

You were knocked out of your semi-rest when you realized his hold had gotten tighter, significantly so. You could feel his breath on your neck, shaky and shallow. When you moved slightly, his hold tightened even more so and he pressed his face to your neck.

"It just hurts so much, ________," he whispered against your skin. You could feel the heat of his breath and the brush of his lips and you imagined fangs sinking into your skin, tiny pricks of pain accompanied by a warm wetness that pulsed uncomfortably in your throat. You pressed your hands to his chest to push him away but he held on to you.

"I have class," you said, trying to convince him to release you. The longer he stood there the more intense the need became.

"I know," he murmured.

"I need to go," you reiterated, pushing again. He gave a low groan of anguish and backed up, putting about a foot of space between the two of you. His purple eyes were crystal clear and filled with an animal intensity that struck you when you looked at them.

"Take those," he said, gesturing to the bottle. "Then you'll be better."

You looked down at the bottle hesitantly. "I don't know if I'll be better by tonight, I mean--"

"You will be. It will work. It always works." Zero reached forward, seemingly to take you into his arms, but instead he ran a few fingers down your neck. Then he jerked back and looked into your eyes with a kind of sadness. "You're nervous," he said. "Your pulse is fast. Why are you nervous?"

You stared at him as an absurd feeling of disbelief came over you. "Because I don't want you to drink from me right now," you whispered fiercely. "Of course I'm nervous. I'm anemic!" You waved your hands about in confusion. "I'm nervous because I'm afraid I'll be in pain or I'll die even--" Zero flinched at the word. "--and I'm nervous because... well, because you'd be in pain otherwise. I just... I just don't know." You sighed and looked down at the bottle.

That was the issue. Vampires sometimes became accustomed to a certain person's blood, and then they would always prefer it, but that tended to be the extent. But with Zero something had gone wrong--and maybe it was because of his lineage or something, you didn't know. But once he had drank from you, that was it. Other blood made him sick, physically ill, but you had a vague notion that was psychological and not physiological; really, he was addicted. And you hadn't figured this out until a few months ago, when it was vacation and you had gone away for a week, and on the second day you received a frantic phone call from Yuki about how Zero was displaying odd symptoms of withdrawal and how is this happening, what's going on, please come back and help, he says he needs you.

You hadn't really understood. The day of the call you begged your parents to let you leave early and they bought you a plane ticket--begrudgingly--and you arrived back at the school on the fourth day of vacation to what amounted to a mess.

It had been surreal, you recalled, to walk into the bathroom and see him laying on his side in the shower, in all of his clothing, with his hands covering his face, breathing raggedly. So surreal, in fact, that you hadn't said anything when you got there, just stared and it only really started when he seemed to sense you and uncovered his face.

Zero had animal eyes. They were wild and vast and emotive, and they mesmerized--you didn't know anyone else with purple eyes. His eyes, when he opened them, had been overwhelming, manic and desperate, and they gripped you and you couldn't look away only because you were afraid that when you looked back at him he'd have degenerated into something else, something nonhuman.

You could barely remember the movement, though you did recall him pushing himself onto his hands and knees--with much apparently painful effort--and moving toward you. His hands were ice-cold and strong, so strong they'd bruised, as he grabbed your wrists with as much gentleness as he could muster, which was not much, and dragged you down on top of him, into his lap.

Things were very vivid here. You remembered the freezing spray of water soaking you, and the feel of his equally cold, wet clothing, clinging to his lean, a-little-too-thin frame, though under his clothes his skin had been hot, as though he had a fever. You remembered being held very tightly with arms wrapped around you, rocking back and forth slightly as he pressed you to him and his face to your neck. And then the odd feeling of heat on your cold skin, the press of fangs and then the momentary pain as they broke through, all very warm, the heat of his mouth a little overwhelming, and the pulls, the greedy, desperate drag on your vein that always made you a little nauseated when you thought too hard about it.

This moment lasted for a long time. You must have sat there with him, holding him as he clutched you to himself very tightly, letting him drink from you voraciously, for almost three minutes. At some point, you felt cold, too cold, and you opened your eyes which you'd never realized you'd closed, and said, "Zero, it's time to stop," softly into his ear which was very near your mouth. He'd stopped sucking, just sat there with his fangs lodged in your neck, slowing his breathing and calming down and you couldn't think of anything else to do but rub his back, slowly, rhythmically, until he unlatched with extreme reluctance and pulled away.

But you two still sat there. Your blood was everywhere, covering his shirt front and his neck, and looking at it made you sick so you'd pulled his shirt over his head and thrown it away from you. You had been nauseated, lightheaded, freezing and weak, and so you'd leaned against his bare chest, against his feverishly hot skin, and he'd held you like that for a while, sitting on the shower floor in freezing spray, while he licked and kissed your neck and ear and up your jaw and your mouth many times, as something like a sorry, but he hadn't ever said sorry, but he'd said your name a few times, and he'd cried silently, which you hadn't noticed until you had found the sliver of strength required to sit up straight and look into his face.

He'd said sorry afterward, though, too many times.

The memory made you queasy. You looked at him as he looked at you and you remembered how humiliated he'd felt. "Zero," you began to say, but he held up his hand to stop you.

"_________, it's not my intent to cause you pain." He sounded dead serious and his eyes showed that.

"I know." You sighed and closed your eyes. There was a brush against your face and he slid his hand up the back of your neck. His mouth was on yours again, slow-moving and warm and his other arm wrapped around your waist and you were so turned on suddenly, and maybe it was because you were feeling bad for him, but the sensation of his hands on you and his raw emotions and his unnatural beauty just all combined and you were swept away for a while, until your back hit the cold wall.

You were jerked back to reality and pulled away reluctantly. You realized you were holding his face in your hands and he was lifting you up towards him--he was significantly taller than you--so you were on your tiptoes. You blinked and tried to think of a way to deal with the situation at hand. Slowly, he lowered you to your feet, but he kept staring into your eyes, and when you didn't say anything he leaned in and kissed you again.

"___________," he said against your mouth, somewhere between a whisper and a groan. You remembered this wasn't going to happen and let go of his face, instead pressing your hands to his shoulders and pushing.

"Zero," you said when he pulled back and gave you a confused look. "Can we just... Can we just wait and do this later? I'm technically supposed to have class now..." You smiled at him.

He seemed to go through a complicated set of phases, in which he looked disappointed and then he looked distressed--here he looked down at your wrists--and then he looked resigned, and that melted into a sad smile that jabbed at you a little. "I'm sorry," he said. "I can get the teacher to waive the lateness, if you'd like."

"Um, I'll have to see how upset he is, I think."

"Okay." He ran a hand through his pale hair and breathed out deeply. Slowly, in an almost torturous fashion, his eyes melted into dark, glimmering pools of desperation, the rawness that was just under his skin when he was experiencing a wave of need. "But you'll take them, right? I don't want to hurt you. They'll make it bet--"

"Yes, I know," you interjected, and then felt bad when he looked ashamed of his worry. "Thank you for worrying about me, Zero." You smiled at him and picked your bag up off the floor.

He didn't say anything, but he stared at you for a while. Eventually, he swallowed and looked away, down at the floor, eyes shifting and searching for something unseen.

You sighed and reached out to lightly touch his arm. His eyes flicked up toward you, the exhaustion and frustration pounding through them like electricity. The danger, the tiny bit of it that was always there, was barely visible, and you knew that the longer you stood there the more difficult it would become for him, until eventually the danger would burst to the surface and that animal part of him, the part of him you saw in the shower that day, would break free and you'd be unable to fight him off.

Not that that would ever happen. Though, it almost had a few times.

You nodded at him and managed another smile. "See you tonight, Zero," you said softly, and pulled yourself away from the magnetism of his gaze and walked off down the hall.

-

The pills were a weird thing. They were nondescript blue capsules that performed the seemingly impossible task of replenishing blood. It was a painless but bizarre process in which you took one with water and lay down on your bed for a few hours, and after a short while of this stillness your blood would be back, as though it hadn't ever left, pounding through your veins and heart. It freaked you out.

You figured it couldn't be healthy. Due to Zero's addiction, you needed to take them many times a week, sometimes an upwards of six or so, just to stay alive and out of the hospital. It was a horrible idea, you thought, to let him just take and take, but you couldn't imagine any other way, because the blood pills did nothing and other blood made him 'ill' and if he didn't consume any for over a span 12 hours, bad things would happen: first, he'd get irritable, which would slowly slide into an inability to think about anything else but feeding; then, he'd begin to shake, starting with his hands, and his skin would become cool and damp with sweat, and he'd be overcome with an extreme, unmanageable exhaustion--this second stage could go on for a while, for hours and hours, but eventually two things would happen, and you spent a lot of your time dreading them.

There'd be pain. Lots of it. It would attack his muscles and he'd be unable to do anything but curl up somewhere or thrash around in agony, but more commonly he'd get into an icy shower and just lay there, numbing himself, his skin boiling hot and on fire, and his body slowly turning colder and colder, until there was nothing but the pain of the two disparate temperatures to think about, to be miserable about.

And then there'd come the degeneration of his humanity. You'd only seen this once ever, but you'd seen beginning stages of it many times: the wash of mania in his eyes, the change in voice, the crawling and the begging.

The begging was the worst.

Your eyes snapped open as the memory poured in like ice water. The words on the page spun for a moment before you could focus and remember is was your homework. You sat up in the desk chair and sat in stunned silence, feeling your heart pound in your chest erratically, too quickly, like a rabbit's. You tried taking a slow breath and things calmed down after a minute.

The sleep sat heavy in your chest. You rubbed your eyes vigorously to wake yourself up. The clock read 8:43 in the evening and outside the windows, the sky was a dull, darkening gray-blue. The dark silhouette of the trees stabbed at the horizon, sharp and at odd angles. You stood and moved to the window to stare down into the courtyard.

Four people milled about in the middle, all dressed in white, all looking somber. Night class students. You pressed closer to the glass and climbed up on the window seat, craning to see who they were. The moment the thought entered your head, one of them, the one with dark hair--Kaname, you noted, the thought delayed by your confusion--looked up toward you and made eye contact. You stayed very still and kept staring back, keeping your expression as neutral as possible, until he turned somewhat toward you and raised a hand in greeting.

You stopped. Automatically, you returned the wave and watched as he stared for a little while longer and then turned back to the other three. When they all successively looked up in your direction you backed away from the window and pulled the drapes shut.

They knew. You knew they knew. You had a vivid recollection of a Thursday evening in which you were sitting by the front gates and a person, so ethereal they may not have been real, materialized right next to you on the bench, and, looking you dead in the face with wide, glowing blue eyes, placed a gentle, cool hand on your arm and said, "I'm sorry. You'll be okay," in an extremely understanding, sympathetic, reassuring tone. That was it, and he--you realized it was a he only after he'd begun speaking--stood and was gone before you could reply.

You didn't know if you cared that they knew. You figured you probably should.

The pills were sitting in their bottle on the desk. You glanced over at them and made a small, involuntary noise of discomfort. Cautiously, you picked the bottle up and unscrewed the cap and two blue pills tumbled into your palm. You flipped them over on your hand, feeling them slip and slide on your skin. "Water," you muttered, and wandered into the bathroom.

The floor was sparkling white and pristine, probably from all the cleaning fluids. You stared down at the tile and then up at the mirror. You looked tired, you thought. The water was cold when you turned it on, and you ran your fingers underneath it for a moment before grabbing the cup and filling it.

You thought about if there was anything left to do. Once you took the pills, you had to just lay there, very still, and once that was finished you knew you still weren't going to be available to work--Zero was possessive and affectionate, and you were going to be very occupied. The thought made you go cold for a moment, and so you quickly placed both pills in your mouth and took a drink of water before you changed your mind. You had changed your mind before. It was kind of an ordeal.

You poured the rest of the water out and stared into the mirror again. Your eyes were a little out-of-focus and so you widened them to try and push back the exhaustion. As you stood there, a peculiar feeling of lightheadedness came over you, starting out dim, only a blip, and then swelling until you felt on the verge of vertigo. You gripped the sides of the wash basin and hissed.

Getting over to the bed took some effort, but once you lay down on your back, the discomfort vanished and was replaced by the sensation of slowly being filled with warm water--this new feeling wasn't necessarily the best, either, but it wasn't unpleasant. You shifted on your back and felt your body sinking into the mattress, everything going slack. You closed your eyes and sighed.

There was a light knock on the door forty-five minutes later. Your eyes fluttered open and began adjusting to the dim lighting of the room. The glow from the bathroom poured in, and the sunset had just fallen beyond the horizon so all there was to see was color, illuminated by a past ball of fire and chemicals. The room was dark, bluish, a little hazy. You blinked a few times to clear your head.

There was another knock, a little more tentative, and you could faintly discern the sound of pacing feet. You tried sitting up but couldn't, and you fell back on the bad again. "You can come in," you said with a voice as loud as you could muster, which wasn't very loud. The handle turned slowly and then the door clicked open. Warm orange light shown in and immediately it was blocked out by the figure slipping into the room.

Zero closed the door softly behind himself and turned toward you. "__________," he said softly, walking over to the bed. You felt the mattress shift as he climbed onto it, moving so as to lay down next to you. He propped himself up on an arm. "How are you? How is it?" His eyes were liquid.

You stared up at him because that was the only thing you could do. "I'm okay." You wanted to touch his face, it was so still, so full of concentration, to see if it would ripple like pond water. From this distance, you could see his pale skin, absolutely smooth, pulled over the strong planes of his face, and the marriage of delicacy and roughness in everything. His eyes, glimmering in the off lighting, were luminous and gazing intently back down at you. Zero made you feel inadequate.

"Just okay?" he murmured, and used a hand to brush your hair out of your eyes. Just before drinking, Zero fell into a phase of extreme affection and romance. You think you understood it. Taking blood was an action of unbelievable intimacy, beyond anything you could imagine. The first time he'd drank from you, he spent a lot of his time whispering into your ear and running his hands up and down your body and kissing anywhere available. It had been rather soothing, considering the feel of teeth sinking into your skin was entirely foreign, and especially foreign to you was the immense sexual arousal it got out of him. So shocking, in fact, was this revelation, that when, post-drink, he wanted to have sex, you couldn't wrap your head around it.

"You want to what?" 

"Sleep with you, _________."

Silence, but he pulled his shirt off over his head and slid his hands up under your own shirt and seemed to want to remove it in the same fashion. 

"W-what?" There was still a stinging, sore sensation on your neck where he'd been drinking. You wanted to touch it, to press a hand to it to make sure it wasn't a gaping, open wound, but when you raised your arm to do so, Zero took your hand in his and kissed your palm.

"Make love to you, __________," he whispered against your skin, and everything was hot. 

You felt yourself turn bright red at the memory and Zero, seemingly in response, though you couldn't be sure, leaned down and kissed your cheek. The odd warmth of the pills' effects coursed through you like a heated stream. You closed your eyes and pictured a bathtub slowly filling.

There was a sudden hot, wet heat and Zero nipped a bit at your skin below your ear. You jumped and opened your eyes. "Zero," you said quickly. "It's not done. I'm not ready."

He sighed very deeply and the air hissed out through his teeth. "I need it," he whispered, eyes lighting up. You could see his fangs beyond his parted lips, needle-like and white. His breathing had escalated and now he pressed a hand over his mouth, squeezing his eyes shut.

"You'll be okay," you told him, and somehow willed your hand to reach up and stroke his cheek. He looked down into your eyes and took your hand lightly, licking at the pulse point in your wrist. You cringed when you felt his teeth scrape the healing cuts. "Don't," you said grimly.

"How long has it been?" he asked quietly, mouth moving against your skin.

"Less than an hour."

He swore and closed his eyes. You watched as he ran a hand through his hair and placed your hand back on the mattress reluctantly. "I'm not leaving you," he said with finality.

"That's okay." You smiled and closed your eyes. Beside you, Zero shifted and the bed sunk on your right side as he lay down. He slid an arm over your waist and pulled you toward him until your side was flush to his body, and you leaned your head on his chest and heard his heartbeat thump along diligently, and sensed the faint smell of mint on his shirt.

You opened your eyes when everything was a little too warm. Zero was on top of you, you realized, on his knees and elbows, and so much larger than you. His face was buried in your neck, nuzzling, and you seized up when he rocked his hips against yours.

"Z-Zero?" you prompted, reaching up to pull his face from your throat. Upon this movement, you realized the pills had done their job and that he must have sensed the sudden influx of blood into your body and was reacting to it. "Zero," you urged, when he didn't pull back immediately. "Stop. Slow down."

He made a small noise of pleasure and looked down at you, purple eyes glazed and shimmery. "__________," he said, voice misty and deep with lust. "I'm going to take some, okay?"

"W-wait. Hold on." You struggled backwards into a seated position against the headboard and watched warily as Zero crawled back on top of you, tracking. You took a shaky breath and put out a hand to stop his advance. He sat back on his knees and grabbed the hand, slipping your middle and index fingers into his mouth. You gasped at the silky, hot wetness and he stared deeply into your eyes.

"O-okay, just... just wait a moment," you said, swallowing. His eyes fluttered shut and he let you pull your fingers out of his mouth. Zero gave a strangled sort of noise and looked at you.

"__________, please," he whispered and when he reached out to run a finger down from your temple to your jaw, you forgot why you were resisting and just felt bad. As his mouth pressed gently to yours, you sighed and let go.

The hallway was dead. On the left, the closed doors had given way to blank walls, and every so often a painting rushed by. Yuki's hand gripped your elbow too tightly as she pulled you down the corridor. She was breathing heavily and her eyes were wide and skin pale, sallow. Sometimes, she'd seem to want to say something and her mouth would open but she'd immediately close it.

The door came up suddenly on the right, all white wood and surrounded by a thin outline of light in the dim hall. Yuki skidded to a stop and pushed you toward the door. You looked at her, not sure what to do, what she wanted, what was happening, but she gestured urgently and then made an upset noise and whispered, "Listen!" You jumped at her tone and hesitantly pressed your ear to the door.

At first, you weren't sure what you were hearing. Something like a growl, or a scream or a moan of pain, or just white noise, and then quiet, nothing at all, followed by a low, desperate groan. You furrowed your brow in concentration and went to reach for the knob when something slammed into the door. You stumbled back and gasped. Yuki was staring at the door in something like horror. You looked at her. "W-what is that?" you whispered forcefully, feeling the shaking begin.

She turned her wide, watery eyes to yours. You'd never seen such confusion and fear before. "You have to go in there, ____________," she hissed, voice trembling. "You have to fix it. I... I don't know what to do. We don't know what to do." Something slammed against the door again and she covered her mouth to stop a scream. You stared at her and listened to the noises, muffled by the door. Slowly, you approached it and reached for the knob. As your hand touched the freezing metal, you could hear frantic speech, unintelligible, mixed in with the growling and the groaning and the pained noises. You twisted the knob and heard the bolt click, and slowly swung the door open.

Zero took your face in his hands and kissed down your jaw. You tried very hard to relax your shoulders but you just couldn't, and instead you wrapped your arms around his neck. He made a pleased purring noise and rubbed his mouth along your neck, leaving heat. You dug your fingers into his shirt and closed your eyes, waiting for the pressure and the resulting pinch, the sinking and the pull. Anxiety filled you and just as soon as it came, pressing at your heart, it dissipated as Zero pulled you into his arms and wrapped himself around you.

"I love you," he whispered against your damp skin. You took a deep breath and ran your fingers through his silver hair. You were never sure if the words Zero said during moments such as this were truthful or driven by his overwhelming desire for what was inside you. The thought hurt. But you thought it a lot, and every time he'd prove you wrong: pulling you aside in the hallways and kissing you and saying very earnestly, "I love you," or whispering something into your ear that would make you laugh, or buying you things you didn't ask for, or any number of things that you would not usually associate with Zero.

You pressed your mouth to his ear and whispered, "Me too." He made a noise of pleasure against your skin and nipped lightly. And there it was, the sharpness of fangs, but they didn't break skin, he just held them there, and seemed to savor what was about to happen.

When he bit in, you jumped a little and he tightened his hold on you. The pain lasted a moment and then there was the soft, wet heat of his mouth, his tongue, the discomforting feeling of warm liquid rolling slowly down your collarbone, the bizarre pulling sensation as he sucked greedily, and the rhythmic comfort of his hand rubbing up and down your back slowly, deliberately. You hissed out a shaky breath through your teeth.

The room was bright and cheerful, but the headmaster was on the floor in the far corner holding very tightly onto Zero, who struggling to get out of his grip. The two of them wrestled for a moment, and you got very worried Zero was going to hurt him, he was looking so vicious, when he snapped his head around to look at you and all hell broke loose.

"___________!" he screamed, trying desperately to crawl toward you.

"Get away!" the headmaster yelled, as Zero clawed at the wood floor. "Get out of here, both of you!"

"She can help him," Yuki said with a slight tremble in her voice, gesturing to you. "This is what he nee--"

"Get out!"

Zero groaned in anguish and it developed very quickly into a choking sound. "___________!" he was saying, voice raw. You stared at him as he was held down on the floor by the frustrated headmaster. His eyes were wild and they latched onto you with the fierce concentration of a predator, except he began crying. "Please," he sobbed. "____________, come here."

You looked on in horror. Yuki came up beside you and placed a hand on your shoulder. "He's in a lot of pain," she muttered, watching warily. You tilted your head toward her but never looked away. She sighed and closed her eyes. "I-it's just... I wish it hadn't come to this..." You thought she might have begun to cry but you weren't sure.

Zero was saying your name over and over again, and the headmaster was struggling to keep him down, and eventually Zero, face down on the floor, bit out, "Get off of me! Get off! I need her! ____________, please, please come here! I need you!" He said please a few more times but it degraded into sobbing again. The headmaster looked torn and turned his eyes toward you. 

"He needs to drink, ___________. He can't from anyone else."

You looked at him. "I-I know," you said softly. "I know that."

You knelt down on the hardwood floor and Zero's watery, wild purple eyes stared up at you. He made a choked sound of devastation in his throat and tried to drag himself toward you. The headmaster fought back and Zero started yelling nonsensical pleads again. 

"It's okay," you said to them, but mostly to Zero. Both of them looked at you and Zero ran his tongue across his teeth, the fangs bright white in the light. You moved a bit closer and he stared at you in what seemed to be awed, anguished silence. "Should I just... cut myself?" you asked the headmaster quietly, frowning as Zero made a growling noise at the question.

He furrowed his brow in thought. "That might be safest, yes."  He reached up and ran his hand along the desk top blindly. He eventually got a hold of a knife, black-bladed and paper-thin, and handed it to you quickly. You took it and Zero watched you, tracked you like a hunting dog.

"Don't. Don't," he said, voice strained and hoarse from all the yelling. He lunged at you again but was caught. "Don't hurt yourself, ___________. Don't. Please, just... just come here. I'll be gentle. Please. I need you." His eyes were vast pools of sorrow. When the headmaster wouldn't let up and you didn't come toward him, he broke down. "___________, please," he said, voice cracking. Tears ran down his face. You'd never seen him cry so much in your life--Zero hardly ever cried, anyway. 

You opened and closed your mouth silently. He bared his teeth and sobbed, closing his eyes and giving one, violent struggle. "Please! ___________, please! It hurts! I'll do anything! I'll do anything at all!"

You couldn't handle the pleading and the tears. You thought you might start to cry yourself and that would do nothing helpful. Slowly, shakily, you got to your feet and turned the knife over in your hands. "Just a little bit?"

"Just a little bit," the headmaster replied levelly. "We'll see how it goes."

You took a deep breath and ignored every thought in your head. The blade was cool and sterile-feeling as it pressed to your skin. You very carefully sliced a shallow cut onto your palm, drawing an instant pool of blood. Yuki made a gasping noise and you had a moment of nothing where you just stared at it. Slowly, it dripped onto the floor, and you didn't see it until it'd already happened.

Zero purred against your skin and adjusted his hold on you, so you were sitting, facing him, with your legs on either side of his hips. He rocked himself against you and you suppressed a rising moan. "Maybe we should wait... wait for it to be done," you whispered against his ear. Once, Zero had bitten you during sex and it was an overwhelming flood of sensations, and you couldn't focus on one thing, but Zero had been out of his mind in pleasure--you had to remind him to keep the two separate very often.

He stopped the rocking and fell still. You waited, listening to his breathing and his drinking, and feeling the warmth leave you slowly. You reached a hand over and ran your fingers down the column of his neck, and then up and down and up, feeling the ripple as he swallowed, the muscles contracting and rolling. For the next few minutes it was quiet. Zero had fallen into some content kind of coma, and he just sat there, holding you very close to his body, with his eyes closed and his hands sliding up and down your spine every so often.

"Only a little bit more, okay?" you told him quietly, the cold seeping under your skin at an increasing rate. He made a soft affirmative noise and you felt his tongue against your skin. You turned your eyes downward and watched as blood dripped down his neck, his chest, blotching his shirtfront, red pathways everywhere. All the spilling made you queasy, but he enjoyed it, and there were many moments where you tried very hard to clean him up in post, but he would have none of that. Once, you came upon him sitting on the bathroom floor, dragging his fingers through the rivers, smearing the blood across his skin, and then licking it off his hands. It was a fanatical kind of devotion you didn't quite get.

Zero made a strangled noise and you looked down at where your blood had splattered a bit on the hardwood floor. The headmaster grunted as Zero kicked out violently against him, struggling, clawing, until the older man let go.

You watched in shock as he lapped the blood off the floor, on his hands and knees at your feet. There was a moment where it wasn't real, where he wasn't degrading himself for relief, but it all came back in a rush when he looked up at you, purple eyes glazed and wide, and whispered, "Please, __________, more," in a hoarse, cracking voice. You couldn't move, you could only look on as he slid himself into a kneeling position and grabbed your cut hand with fingers like vises. His tongue was hot and his breath labored as he licked at the blood and scratched at the skin with his fangs.

Then he latched on to your wrist with all his might and calmed down immediately, his breathing slowing, relaxing, his eyes sliding shut, his breath leaving him in a groan of contentment. The three of you watched in silence as he drank, blood dripping down his chin, his front, greedily and in large pulls. 

"Zero," the headmaster said cautiously. "Don't take so much. You could hurt her."

His hands tightened around your forearm but he only continued. The headmaster sighed and got to his feet, trying to adjust his clothing and arrange himself after such a battle. "__________," he said, voice full of a weird sort of sorrow. "Don't be afraid to stop him."

You pulled your eyes away from Zero's placid, blissful face only for a moment to look up at him. "It'll be okay," you replied softly, afraid to break Zero's trance. "I can handle it, I think." You ran the fingers of your free hand through his pale hair a few times, and when he made a pleased purring noise, you settled into petting him gently, rythmically, until it seemed as though he'd left completely.

Yuki placed a soft hand on your shoulder and spoke quietly. "If you need help, just call me, okay?" She smiled as she left and the headmaster slipped out and closed the door behind them both. You took a measured breath and focused very hard on the feeling of his heat against your cold skin. 

"Not much more, okay?" He was taking huge gulps and you were feeling shaky all of a sudden. You couldn't tell if he hadn't heard or if he simply couldn't stop himself, so consumed with the warmth and the ecstasy pouring from you and into his veins.

"Zero," you whispered, leaning down toward him until your head was by his. "Only a little more, please. It's going to be too much soon..." As you stared very closely at his calm expression, his eyes slid open, revealing glazed pools. You weren't sure he could see you, he had retreated so far into his own space, but he sighed through his nose and seemed to try and measure himself. The drinks slowed down, became smaller and lazier, and eventually he stopped sucking at all, just sat there as blood seeped out of your wrist and dripped down his chin and neck, basking in the warmth and the pleasure and the closeness.

He unlatched, his fangs wet with blood and his mouth all red, and cleaned himself, licking his lips and teeth, but he didn't wipe at the blood covering his front, and eventually he stopped, closed his eyes, and settled down into a cross-legged position in front of you, at your feet, breathing slowly, deeply, curling over his legs. You watched his shoulders rise and fall and knelt down in front of him, gripping your wrist so as to place pressure there and begin the clotting process--you were feeling weak and cold and shaky. 

"Zero?" you said softly, gently. His eyes slid open slowly and tilted up toward you. They swirled with a painful mixture of shame and apology and sorrow. You flinched at their astonishing clarity and folded yourself into a seated position. "Are you feeling better?" you asked, touching his shoulder. "Do you need anything?"

He reached forward carefully and took your bleeding wrist, pressing his lips to it for a lingering moment. "I'll heal you," he said. You saw his eyes shimmer as they watered and you cautiously, delicately, reached out and stroked his cheek with a thumb. He didn't cry, only looked devastated, and closed his eyes again. 

"Anything at all?" you prompted softly.

"Water," he barely said. "And sleep." His eyes found yours, brilliant in the light. "Will you sleep with me, ___________?"

You smiled. "Of course." 

Zero pulled back after a short minute and lapped at the bite. "Thank you," he said seriously, gazing into your face with a wild intensity that was softened somewhat by the love in his tone. You smiled and took his face in your hands.

"You're welcome," you said, kissing him. He sighed and tightened his hold around your body. When you pulled back, he frowned and closed his eyes briefly.

"I'm sorry. I took a lot. I'll be better next time."

"You were fine, really." He leaned into you, face against your neck, and you held him, petting his hair absently. He was red, his clothing and skin stained with blood, but you didn't care for a moment and could ignore the cold of your body by absorbing his radiating heat. "I love you, Zero."

He sighed and nuzzled your skin lightly. "Me too," he replied, voice low and muffled. You smiled into his hair and toyed gently with one of his earrings.

"I know you do."

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

:]|Unexpectedly|[: [a Zane Truesdale one-shot for MisszazahGXtruesdale]




You looked up just as someone dropped a glass off the balcony. It shattered against the marble floor, shards flying and flipping through the air. There was a scream of shock and Crowler blew up in a hissy fit. “Don’t do that!” he screeched. “Don’t you know the health inspectors are coming?”

Being on an island, the Duel Academy had its fair share of hazards. Not only was it difficult to evacuate, but the usually damp air was perfect for diseases and insects. You always had this image of opening up the stadium doors to see millions of crawling things. Though, while the school was a theoretical danger, it didn’t really experience many issues. There hadn’t been a mold outbreak, there hadn’t been an infestation of carpenter ants, and there hadn’t been a full-scale fire that required evacuating. It was okay.

But, anyway, the health inspectors were coming. You stepped back from the broken glass and wound your way through the mob of students who had stopped to see Crowler have an aneurysm. The hallways were nearly empty because most people where in class, but you had free time because you were in Obelisk.

You were what you called a “reluctant Obelisk.” Essentially, that meant that when it came down to testing you fell into the Obelisk category, but as a person you were not quite cut out for it. For example, you were a hella awkward duelist. Most people can get up in front of the school and snap on the duel disk and play some cards; you could do no such thing. Nor did you want to. Dueling was a pretty visceral experience, and a weird one at that—you had little interest in dealing with holograms, especially holograms that didn’t always stay holograms. 

Crowler’s shrill voice echoed down the corridor and you quickly dove into the study room and shut the sound-proof door behind you, albeit gently. The study room was reserved for Obelisk students only but no one really enforced that rule, so anyone could use it as long as they weren’t too obvious. It was perfectly square and filled with bookshelves and desks and armchairs and tables for group study. Though, to be honest, not much studying went on in there; it was kind of a quiet, social gathering place. 

You slunk to the back of the room and threw all of your stuff down next to an overstuffed chair. Nearby, a group of Ra students talked quietly at one of the tables. The lights were dimmer than usual and it was considerably calmer than it had been yesterday and earlier this week. It was kind of your hang-out spot. 

You fell heavily into the chair and kicked your school-issued boots off, tucking your feet under you. You had disgusting amounts of homework but didn’t want to do any of it, and so you snuggled into a corner of the chair and flipped aimlessly through some scientific journal lying on the coffee table beside you. 

Thirty minutes later, someone came to stand by your chair. “What are you reading?” they asked.

You glanced up to see a disgruntled-looking Chazz. He glared back and nodded at the book. “I don’t know,” you said, blinking up at him. “The human genome, I think.” You looked at the cover of the journal and nodded. 

Chazz half snorted, but seemed to control himself. “You can’t read the human genome, idiot,” he said under his breath. He looked about himself, seemingly for a chair, but decided against it, instead crossing his arms defensively over his black jacket front. “Why?”

“Why not?” You shut the book against your chest. Chazz rarely ever spoke to you. You thought you two had maybe one real conversation ever, but you’d recently been paired up in a practice duel that ended in a draw because Crowler had been rushed off to a meeting. You were suddenly afraid he was going to challenge you to a duel. You shut your eyes and prayed to every god you could think of that that wasn’t the case. 

Chazz raised an eyebrow. “No reason. Just curious. Are you going Saturday night?” It wasn’t really a question. Chazz’s voice was about as dead as the burger you’d eaten last night for dinner, and his entire expression was deadpan. He was the master of apathy, this boy.

“What’s Saturday night?” you asked tentatively, afraid you were missing something huge.

Chazz said nothing for a short while. “The end of semester dance,” he said finally. He didn’t even blink. You weren’t sure that was a good thing. 

“Oh. Oh!” you exclaimed in a whisper. “I forgot. Wow. Yeah, I’m going.” You set aside the journal and narrowed your eyes on middle space in thought. Chazz rolled his eyes and sighed in vexation.

“Are you going with someone?” he asked tiredly, uncrossing and recrossing his arms. 

You snapped your eyes up to look at him. “Oh my god, is it one of those dances? I am so bad at those kinds of dances…” You made a face and a small sobbing noise.

Chazz seemed to consider your sanity for a moment. “Yes, it’s one of those dances. So I guess you’re not going with anyone yet…” He sighed and looked up at the ceiling, tapping his foot softly on the carpeted floor. You watched Chazz be Chazz and strongly considered hiding beneath the chair as a way to save yourself from the judgment waves pouring off of him. 

He looked back down at you and blinked rapidly a few times as though trying to clear his mind. “Is there anyone you want to go with?” he asked in that sort-of way he sort of asked questions. 

You pursed your lips and leaned forward on your elbows. “Well, I haven’t thought about it.” You scrunched your nose up at him. “I suppose there’s someone I’d go with. I just haven’t thought of them yet.”

Chazz narrowed his already narrow eyes at you. “Well, when you think of that someone, let me know.” He dropped his arms and shoved them in his pockets, nodding tritely at you before turning and starting to walk away.

“Wait, Chazz!” you hissed in a stage whisper. He looked over his shoulder at you expectantly. “Are you saying you want to go with me?” you asked, tilting your head at him. Chazz stared at you briefly before closing his eyes and smiling smugly.

“Of course not, idiot,” he muttered, striding out of the study room and shutting the door a little too loudly behind him. You sighed and sunk back into the chair unceremoniously. The dance was another stupid thing to think about, and now that you thought about it, was a pretty damn big deal. You sighed and buried your face in your hands. 

You did some homework you didn’t want to do and tried comprehending the science journal you had been reading earlier to no avail. At some point, you put everything down and just stared at the ceiling.

The study room was warm and dim, and you looked at your watch to see that it was almost three. “Blah,” you breathed, curling into the chair as tight as you could go, trying to make time and school and everything go away for, like, ten minutes so you could nap.

Moments later, it seemed, you opened your eyes and sat up in the chair. Your head spun and you reached up to tame your unruly brown hair that was, generally, unruly by nature. You checked your watch to see that only two minutes had passed and slumped down in the seat as your heart rate slowed. 

“Excuse me,” a voice said, closer than you realized at first. You jumped in shock and looked around for a moment before looking over to your right at the nearest bookcase. A tall male Obelisk student stared at you, and you only kind of recognized the face.

You looked around, trying to figure out who he may have been speaking to. When you saw no one, you pointed at yourself and blinked rapidly. “Oh. Oh, me. Yeah?” You adjusted yourself so you weren’t a lump in the middle of the chair and tried to look at least sort of competent.

He stepped forward from the shadow of the bookcase and moved the books in his right hand to his left. “Are you still reading that?” He nodded at the journal lying open on the arm of the chair. As you watched him, he seemed to smile, but only with his eyes. “I noticed you were using it before…”

“Oh, no, I’m not. You can have it.” You closed it and handed it to him. He took the few steps closer and took it from you gently, adding it to his stack. “Sorry about that…”

“It’s fine,” he said, and you were beginning to recognize him, but not quite. You swore you’d seen this guy before. He wore an Obelisk uniform, a tight blue shirt under a blue jacket, and the usual school issued boots you’d seen a billion times. You squinted your eyes, trying to recall the name. 

 “Interested in the human genome?” you muttered to yourself. He must have heard it, because he looked up at you and did the eye-smile from before. The rest of his face was placid.

“Heart disease,” he said simply. You blinked blankly. “There are many articles in here.” He held up the book and waved it a bit in the air. You tried your hardest not to feel like a stupid blob. It only kind of worked.

“Oh. Sure,” you said, still lost in remembering the name. It was on the tip of your tongue…

He had begun to turn away, but you looked up just as he was turning back to you. “Are you Aila?” he asked. It sounded as though he already knew, to be honest.

“Uh, yeah.” You nodded slowly and unconsciously reached up to wrestle your hair into submission. 

“You are…?” You hoped he couldn’t tell you had no idea who he was. It was always uncomfortable when you’ve gone to school with someone for three years and never learned their name. Incredibly uncomfortable.

“Zane. Zane Truesdale,” he said, and you could see the ghost of an actual smile on his face. 

Something in you stopped but you couldn’t tell what. You widened your eyes only kind of, and acted as though you had known that all along, but you couldn’t tell if it worked. “Oh, hi,” you smiled at him and waved a little. The most bizarre feeling of absurdity came over you. Zane retained the tiny almost-smile and nodded at your wave, turning and walking over to a table a few chairs down from your chair. You watched as he sat down and arranged his books before him.

Of course. Zane Truesdale. You scrunched your nose up and fell back into the chair. You knew Zane Truesdale, technically. He was, like, the man of the school. You just never had immediate contact with him, and so you couldn’t have placed the name with the face no matter how hard you’d tried. Though, you could actually remember seeing him before in duels and classes, but it just never clicked. You sighed and wiped a hand down your face. Oh, Aila.

Three-thirty saw you still in your soft chair, taking notes on special summons from an enormous textbook balanced on your knees. The table of Ra students had dispersed and now there were just a handful of people in the study room, mainly Obelisk students. You threw your head back to look at the ceiling and blew air out of your mouth to disrupt the hair falling in your face. It just floated back down into your eyes. Your hair was long and wavy-curly—it couldn’t decide, apparently—and usually a mess. A hot mess, but a mess. You brushed it all over one shoulder and held it there.

The bell rang for late afternoon classes. You made an upset noise and slowly lifted the textbook off of yourself, closing it and setting it on the coffee table. The other students did similar things: snapping binders shut, rustling papers, stuffing bags. You put your notebook back in your pack and zipped it up, collecting your jacket over one arm. Class began at 3:45 and yours was only up the stairs, so there wasn’t a huge rush.

You glanced over at Zane to see him rising and stacking his books neatly by size. You sighed and walked out of the study room. In the hallway, you took out your phone and read an unread text from your mom asking about holiday break. You scrunched your nose up at the screen and decided to reply later. 

The study room door opened and closed behind you. Something moved in your peripheral vision and you turned toward the person. Zane was holding out the science journal. “Here,” he said, and his tone had something like amusement in it. “For your genome research.” 

You took it from him and caught the more-than-almost smile on his face as he turned away and walked off down the hall. You flipped the first page open and noticed a note stuck to the inside cover. Ref HG 1866-1923.C75, it said in crisp, all-caps handwriting. 

“Oh,” you said. “Oh, that’s real cute.” You shook your head and shoved the note in your pocket, tucking the journal under your arm and heading the opposite way down the corridor. 

“When the inspectors are here, there are to be no shenanigans!” Crowler cawed to the students. You rested your head on the desk and sighed. He was losing it. 

Chazz came walking into the class late like it wasn’t any big deal. Crowler didn’t even notice. You blinked as he sat right in front of you and turned in his seat halfway to stare at you curiously. 

“What?”

“You’re, like, twenty minutes late,” you whispered, pointing at your watch. He looked at it and shrugged. 

“Why do you care?” he asked, gazing at you unblinkingly with his almost-dead eyes. You scrunched your face up.

“I don’t, really…” You put your head back on the desk and let your mass of hair fall around your vision like a curtain. Crowler was talking about dorm searches, which you eventually registered and your head shot up.

“Starting tomorrow faculty will be going through the buildings and looking in rooms for any suspicious items that may or may not be a danger to other students.” He clasped his hands together in front of himself and sighed, bowing his head. “I know none of my well-behaved Obelisks will have any… upsetting paraphernalia, but it’s a necessary precaution.” He moved his hand as though to wipe away a tear. “We can’t have the health inspectors coming upon anything suspect.”

The class made a collective noise of distaste. You pouted and dropped your chin down on your arms. You hoped the searchers wouldn’t find your food stash.

Chazz turned halfway in his seat again and did that stare he did. “What?” you half-whispered, half-whined at him. “You’re been interacting a lot with me lately…”

He rolled his eyes. “You know,” he muttered, “most people wouldn’t complain.” He paused and looked at the ceiling briefly. “We need to continue our duel from a few days ago.”

Your heart dropped. “We need to?”

“Yes.” He narrowed his eyes slightly. “There wasn’t any closure. I need closure.” 

You made a face and backed away from his sort-of-manic glare. “But we totally can’t,” you protested slowly, evaluating his danger level. “Because I suck at dueling.”

You could’ve sworn you heard a growl. Chazz seemed to puff up a bit and his eyes darkened. “You do not, and we are dueling. No Obelisk sucks at dueling.”

“Well, I do.” You watched him watch you incredulously. “My cards are balls,” you said, quickly pulling out your deck. You flipped the top card and held it up in front of his face. The two of you looked at the strange fiery horse with the 700 ATK points. “Balls,” you reiterated.

“Balls,” he muttered back at you, nodding his head but giving you the most skeptical look you’d ever seen outside of a cartoon. He looked you up and down momentarily. “Well, think about it,” he said, voice kind of sulky. 

“Yeah, sure,” you mumbled. He nodded and turned back around in his seat. You slumped down and slapped your hands over your face. Crowler’s voice was white noise in the background. You weren’t bad at dueling. Your cards weren’t bad either. But, if you could make Chazz believe the duel would be a waste of time, maybe he wouldn’t bother you about it. Maybe. Probably not.

Thirty more minutes later and the bell rang for the next class. You looked toward the window at the back of the classroom. It was already getting dark—the sun sat low on the water, casting brilliant pink and orange beams against the dark purple sky. You sighed and moved to get your stuff.

Crowler was suddenly next to your desk. You looked up slowly and stared at his pale face for a moment. “Uh, yes, Mr. Cro—Dr. Crowler?” You picked up your bag and jacket and stood in front of him, tucking the science journal under your arm. “Is there something wrong?”

“No,” he said simply. You waited as he seemed to take a very deep breath. “That duel between you and Chazz from a few days ago was so rudely interrupted by that stupid meeting. It should be continued.”

Everything inside of you dropped endlessly. “Oh. Is that to get full credit, or…?”

“No, you already got the credit,” he said, waving his hand dismissively. “It’s for closure.”

You widened your eyes and nodded as though this were the first time you were hearing this. “Uh, yeah. That makes sense. When… When would this be happening?” You tucked your hair behind your ear and put on a very expectant face. 

He narrowed his eyes in thought and hummed. “Friday. At five-thirty. Right after last class and before dinner. It’s perfect,” he decided, apparently, and clapped his hands together. “In the arena.”

You didn’t think you’d be able to move even if you tried. “In the arena? The… arena arena?” When he nodded spastically you tried very hard not to sob. The main arena seated almost 1000 people, definitely the whole school population. Knowing Crowler, he was going to bring an audience. 

“Okay,” you breathed, steadying your voice. “That… sounds good.”

“Great. Now off you go.” He shooed you out of the class and shut the door behind you. You stood in the hallway and stared at passing students in silence for a minute. 

“Oh my god, shit!” you hissed to yourself. Chazz may have been this bizarre, enigmatic lunatic, but he was a very good duelist. You were a much more normal human being who probably ranked about 4.6 on the 1-10 Are You A Good Duelist? scale. Perfect. Your Friday was going to be wonderful.

You woke up the next day and praised the gods above it was only Thursday. First class for you didn’t start until nine, so you rolled, literally, out of bed and onto the floor, where you lay in a heap until you were hungry enough to get up. At eight, you were in the Obelisk dining room, sort of functioning and sort of knowing what you were doing. Students around you were walking by with heaped plates and drinks and you threw your stuff in the general direction of a chair and headed toward the food.

After acquiring your breakfast you took it back to the table and began eating at a sort of healthy pace. You picked up your juice just as a small group of second-year male Obelisk students sidled up to the table. “You, uh, Aila?” one of them—the head, clearly—asked.  

You took a long sip and looked at them over the top of your glass in confusion. “Yeah…”

The group made noises and the main guy grinned. “No way! You challenged Chazz Princeton to a duel for Friday, right?” 

As you stared blankly they all started talking to each other about stats and likelihoods and bets. 

“Right, yeah,” you said finally, setting down the glass and feeling the raging beast within crave the taste of Crowler flesh. However, that beast had your personality, so quickly chilled the hell out and left. You sighed deeply. 

“We’ll definitely be there,” the main guy was saying and exited with his group. You watched them go and tried to calm yourself by shoveling eggs into your mouth. 

At eight-thirty, you set your empty plate on the cart and slung your pack over one shoulder. You stood there for a moment and stared at your schedule, trying to figure out where to spend your free blocks. As you walked through the dining room toward the door, at least three other people acknowledged you had challenged Chazz to a duel. You tried to think of flowers and ponies.

Near the door, you waited for the mob to thin out so you could get through. “Aila,” a voice said casually, calmly over the noise of the crowd. You looked over to see Zane standing with a group of about five other third-year Obelisks you knew to be full of it. He didn’t look remotely fazed by how close they were standing to him, nor by how many girls were prowling the area with predatory, love-filled eyes. You wondered how he was even a human being, being so tolerant.

“… Hey,” you replied, expecting to see a bunch of people look at you. If anyone was, they were subtle about it. You were silently thankful.

Zane blinked at you languidly, expression cool and collected. “How is your genome research going?” he asked, completely serious.

You nodded. “Pretty well, actually,” you said, punctuating the sentence by widening your eyes. You saw the strange eye-smile he did but figured no one else did, because his face remained completely serene. 

“That’s good,” he said, nodding at you. “See you later.” He stared at you impassively and then looked off toward the windows. You wondered how someone could be so weird and yet so normal, and quickly exited the room.

The day was entirely uneventful except for that one part when a student tried tossing a potted plant from one side of the second floor to another student on the other side of the second floor across the foyer but failed, and it sailed to the ground and shattered into a giant smear of dirt and stems and ceramic pieces. Crowler had a conniption or something like it. You were there. It was funny.

You actually took your dinner to your room, where you ate the pasta Bolognese on your floor carefully while staring blankly at your spread out cards. Your best monster was this enormous black dragon with a gazillion ATK points, but you didn’t like summoning him because he was a serious dick. Your life was so difficult.

You collected your favorite cards together and put them at the top of your deck in any random order. Then you leant back against the bed and ate your spaghetti and inwardly sobbed. 

Someone came by and checked your room for “suspicious items” and you were fine because they didn’t find your giant bag of snacks. Score. You ate the rest of your dinner in relative joy.

At lunch the next day, Chazz hunted you down and cornered you in the empty art classroom. You braced yourself, afraid he was going to bite you or kiss you or something equally weird. But he just crossed his arms and stood there. “Our duel is this evening,” he said.

You gazed at him warily. “I know.”

Chazz narrowed his eyes as he did. “Just checking to make sure you knew…” He huffed a bit and sighed. “There will be people.”

“Why are you telling me this?”

“So you get pumped,” he said, almost shouted. “This is a serious duel. A duel between two third-year Obelisks is big news.”

“Great. So I have an idea. You do your thing and I’ll lose on purpose. That way, you get what you want and I don’t have to try too hard and die. It makes sense.” You paused, evaluating his state. “It’s not that I’m so bad I don’t think I’d win, it’s that I don’t care as much as you do, clearly. Well, I care. But not too much, so…”

Chazz had the most disbelieving look on his face. “You… you don’t care? No!” He stamped his foot and swore. “No, you have to care! I care! You should care! You’re an Obelisk, so you should care! Stop talking like that! I want a serious duel!”

“Already this duel is kind of a joke, right? I didn’t actually challenge you.”

“Whatever.” He wiped his mouth and glared at you. “Let’s be serious about this.” He stopped and walked over to the desk, picking up a pencil and flipping it around in his hands. After a minute he put it down and walked back over to you. “You’re a girl, right?”

You stared at him and looked around in confusion. “Yeah…?” You crossed your arms defensively over your chest, trying to block the obvious boobs. He didn’t seem to notice or care. 

“Right. So already people will think I’m going to win. You’re not too well-known and I’m popular—ˮ

“You also talk a lot,” you deadpanned, gesturing toward him.

Chazz gave you a flat stare. “Yeah. Right.”

So the duel happened. Crowler was like a helicopter-mom, shouting praise and kind-of-advice to one or the other of you two. You succeeded in ignoring him, but Chazz spent the entire duel looking extremely tense, but you couldn’t tell what that was about. The crowd of 200 or so students was very loud and you could see Obelisks out of your peripheral vision clamoring closer to the raised platform. You had an increasingly horrible headache.

You didn’t totally throw it. In fact, you didn’t at all. It just didn’t seem fun that way. At one point, when you had 2300 LP and he had 2700, you looked over to see him staring at you intently. “Decide one way or the other,” he had muttered blandly. You thought it may have been a compliment. 

You lost, in the end. But, really, he had 150 LP at that point, so it was as if neither of you won. You didn’t care too much, and were pretty pleased with yourself for not having a nervous breakdown in front of that huge crowd. Crowler was pleased just because both of you did well, and Chazz was not pleased at all but in something like shellshock. After winning, he walked across the stage toward you and just stood there for a moment, eyes very dark and very flat, and then sighed very deeply from somewhere inside of himself and congratulated you in monotone.

“You are so weird,” you said, grabbing his hand and shaking it. He looked at you and his expression slowly changed from nothing to confusion. “I’m hungry,” you said, and left.

You thought that would be the end since you had lost, but it wasn’t. In the dining room people approached you and said things like “Great duel, Aila!” and “Wow, didn’t know you had it in you!” which wasn’t really a compliment. You just wanted to eat your steak. Duels took a lot out of you.

At around 6:45, you were sitting alone at the table in front of your empty dinner plate. You were watching the sun set on the horizon, all pink and orange and red, when a female voice called your name from very close by. You snapped your head up to see a pretty blond girl in a third-year Obelisk uniform. She smiled. “Hi,” she said, “I’m Alexis Rhodes. You don’t know me I don’t think.”

“Uh, no, I don’t.” You tried to think why you should. “I’m Aila, but you seem to already know that…”

“Yes. I saw your duel.” She paused and smiled again. You felt a little pressured to say something but she continued before you could. “You were very good.”

“I lost,” you informed her, as though maybe she hadn’t actually been there but only thought she had. 

“Maybe,” she said. “But you were still very good.”

“Chazz was better.”

“Not really. He may have just pulled better cards.” She tilted her head when you blinked at her blankly. “He was really struggling. That says something.”

You took a deep breath. “Thanks. I don’t… I don’t duel much, so I was kind of winging it…”

“Don’t duel much?” She mouthed the word “wow” to herself and widened her eyes. You smiled at her in semi-confusion and nodded a little. “That’s very cool,” she said. “I’ve never met an Obelisk who wasn’t obsessed with dueling, I don’t think.”

You were trying to figure out if she was serious or not. You thought she may have been. “Well, we’re hard to come by,” you replied. She smiled again, said bye, and left. You sighed and thought about how your graduating class was so different from you, you sometimes thought maybe you were in the wrong year. You supposed she had been nice; you just didn’t really fit in with the dueling elite in this place. 

To drive that point home, Zane was suddenly at your table. He apparently had floated in at some point, or poofed in like a ninja, or materialized out of nothing because he was not there and then he was. You jumped, you were so shocked to see him. “Oh, hi,” you said. “How’s your heart disease research going?”

You could see that he began to smile but stopped himself. “Well, thank you,” he said calmly. He was looking bizarrely put-together in his suit pants and button-up shirt. It took you a moment to realize he wasn’t wearing his Obelisk uniform. You blinked as the thought hit you.

Before you could say anything, he broke his silence and tilted his head to the side slightly. “I saw your duel with Chazz Princeton.”

Great. You nodded and folded your hands together tightly on your lap. “How was that for you?”

“Interesting. He’s a very aggressive duelist.” Zane spoke as though he had done serious research on Chazz and was reporting his findings. “You put up quite a fight.”

“I try.” You were starting to feel highly uncomfortable. He was looking down at you very intently, though his expression remained serene. You realized just how tall he was—very—as he stood there, looking very with it and knowledgeable and imposing. You figured this was why he was such a big deal.

“I wasn’t expecting that,” he said in a voice much softer than before. You looked up to see him evaluating you with a look. You scrunched your nose up.

“Ah, thank you?” You sat up straighter in your chair. “The genome research really helped.”

Zane smiled suddenly. Actually smiled. And he shifted his weight to his right hip and folded his arms and gazed down at you with that smile and said, “You’re funny” in this very calm, very amused tone.
That thing inside of you that had stopped before stopped again now. You choked on your intake of breath and had to try again. Around a cough, you found it in yourself to smile. “Uh, thanks, I guess. You’re pretty funny, too.”

Then he chuckled and you thought maybe the world was ending. “I haven’t heard that one,” he said, still with the smile. You felt a little overwhelmed. He looked at his watch suddenly and frowned. “I have to go. Bye, Aila.” And he nodded at you and did a little wave and was gone. You were very confused.

“Well,” you muttered to yourself, “that’s… that’s nice.” 

You stood in front of your full-length mirror and looked yourself up and down. In your baggy sweatpants and tank top you did not look too fabulous and you tried to remember if you ever had been. You tossed a look at the bed, where various dresses lay in a heap. Most of them were too casual and one of them was this white behemoth that looked oddly like a wedding gown. You were too much of a hot mess for dances.

You gathered your mass of hair and piled it on top of your head in a bun. Now with your giant ball of hair and your slumpy outfit and cartilage piercings showing you looked a bit like the weird caricature of a Slifer your friend had drawn at the beginning of the year on the whiteboard in the Obelisk common room. A little slummy, she might say. Your friend was kind of strange. 

You fell face-down onto the bed and sighed into the sheets. The only semi-appropriate dresses you owned were bandage dresses which were way sexy, and those weren’t too classy. Anyway, you felt gross from all the crap you’d been eating lately, and felt you wouldn’t look too hot in them.

“Being a girl is stupid,” you moaned and kicked at the air a bit. There was a knock at the door and you twitched, glancing around at the mess your dorm was in. Sighing, you pushed yourself off the bed and walked over to open the door.

“Hello!” a teacher you did not recognize said cheerfully. “I’m here for the dorm check.” You stepped aside as she entered and looked around the hexagonal room. After, poking her head in the closet and asking for you to open desk and clothing drawers for her to observe the contents of, she smiled and went back to the door. “Thank you! Have a nice evening.”

You watched her walk off down the hallway and shut the door quietly. “Why?” you sighed unhappily, walking over and falling onto the bed again. 

Your phone buzzed. Your mom wanted to talk about vacation again. You always wondered why it mattered. It wasn’t as though your family had money; on the scale of richest and poorest students in the school you were probably smack dab in the middle. And so every vacation you’d just take the boat back to the mainland, get on a commercial airline and fly yourself home, where you’d sit around with your family and sometimes your friends and talk and eat. Not that it bothered you. It didn’t. But you always wondered why your mother made such a huge deal out of it. It was the same every time.

You rolled off the bed and plopped into a pile of clothes on the floor. Staring up at the ceiling, you could see the bizarre paint patterns from where the brushwork went in different directions and the red squares of light above the windows where the sunset seeped in from behind the shades. You stuck your tongue out at nothing and imagined serpentine dragons coiling in through the window panes, bright turquoise and orange with long manes and ivory claws, two of them, writhing up the walls and turning in circles on your ceiling until they were intertwined and it was hard to discern where one ended and the other began. 

You sighed. Struggling to roll onto your stomach in the tangle of clothes, you reached under your bed and pulled out a thick, oversized hardbound book with a glossy cover. It was last year’s yearbook. You lazily opened to a random page and kept flipping until you reached your year. It was near the end, after the photographs of all the first-years participating in classes and clubs and duels and such.

There was a three-page spread of many 3-inch-by-two-inch photographs of the students in their school uniforms. Only head and shoulder shots, but the vast array of facial expressions made all the blue seem far less dull. 

You ran your finger down the page and then onto the next until you found Zane. To be honest, he looked exactly the same and hadn’t changed one bit physically, but his eyes were vastly different. You had this weird notion that Obelisks best emoted through their eyes—at least, if Chazz was any indication, as he seemed to push all of his frustration and confusion and everything out through his eyes, which were always glittering black like an angry cat with an arched back. 

You held your face close to the page and peered at the small rectangle that was Zane Truesdale. His eyes were somewhat narrowed and somewhere else entirely, definitely not in the studio, looking very piercing and absent. You wrinkled your nose and noticed that his eyes and his hair were very similar in color. You sighed again and shut the book, sliding it back under your bed with the one from first-year. 

Dragging yourself to your knees and then to your feet, and surveyed the dresses once again and began putting them back on their hangers. You wondered if they’d let you attend in casual dress. Probably not.

Dances at the academy were weird things. They included all three houses and usually took place in the high-ceilinged, glass-walled room that was the main ballroom in the Obelisk male dormitories. It looked out over the forest and the ocean beyond and opened out onto a terrace which in turn opened out into the lake.  It was way too fancy, you thought.

They were also very formal, usually. You recalled the first dance of the year in the first week of school and how it was a very tuxedo and gown kind of affair. It stressed you out. 

“Aila!” a voice called from the door. You opened it and your friend Loren stared back at you from behind glasses. She grinned and reached out to grab your face in her hands and roughly kiss your cheek. Then she was in your room, sitting on your mess of a bed, pulling off her heeled boots.

“Hello, friend,” you said, blinking at her get-up. Loren, finishing her shoe removal, jumped up and displayed her outfit. Loren was a model and very tall, with long curly blond hair and honey-colored eyes, and no chest and no hips and these ridiculously long legs. Now she was wearing a tight cranberry dress that only came up to her upper thigh. 

“What do you think?” she asked with all seriousness, turning a slow circle for you. 

You tilted your head and considered. “This is for tomorrow?” She nodded and turned again, pulling her long hair up into a ponytail with her hand so you could see the lace-up back. You hummed and she turned back around. 

“So? Is it too sexy? It’s too sexy.”

“Well… Not really. You could wear tights.”

“I can’t wear tights,” she whined, dropping her hair and crossing her arms. “I can’t. They give me static.”

You made a face and shrugged. “Yeah, then it’s probably too sexy.”

Loren made a noise of utmost frustration. “Okay,” she said, taking a deep breath. “I have this pale fuchsia mermaid gown—ˮ

“That sounds good. Wear that.” You thought briefly about asking to borrow one of her dresses but then remembered that she was a good head taller than you. 

Loren came behind you and hugged you around your waist enthusiastically. “You’re the best, Aila, baby,” she cooed, overwhelming you with floral perfume. You held your breath subtly and nodded. She suddenly reached up and grabbed your boobs. You squeaked and flailed at her aimlessly. She bounded out of the way and crouched down behind the head of the bed fruitlessly. You stalked over to her and folded your arms. “You look great,” she said, staring up at you from her seated position. “I like the ‘I’m not giving a fuck’ look.”

You pouted and flung yourself onto the bed face-first. Loren unfolded and flung herself onto the bed, too. “What’s wrong?” she asked in her baby voice.

You looked out at her from under your hands. “I don’t have a dress or a date for the stupid fucking dance,” you groaned. “And I don’t even care. Should I care? I don’t care.” You paused and sat up suddenly. “Who are you going with?”

Loren beamed. “A boy from Ra.” She blinked languidly. “He’s a good kisser.”

You deadpanned. “Great. I’m happy for you.” You huffed and crossed your arms. “I’m almost eighteen, why can’t I just skip the dance and leave for vacation early? It seems ridiculous…”

Loren adjusted her glasses dramatically. “You cannot leave Duel Academy campus for holiday vacation until the end of semester dance concludes.”

“They just don’t want to have to send more than one boat back to Japan,” you muttered, narrowing your eyes on what you imagined to be the administration. You slapped your hands over your face and made a loud noise of upset. “It’s so gross, Loren. I’m so bad at dances!”

“No, you’re not,” she told you. “You have nice tits.” You stared at her and she shrugged. “It’s a thing that matters.”

You sighed and picked up your cell phone just as your mother texted again about vacation. You replied and tossed the device toward the end of the bed. “You have to bring a date, anyway,” you said, frowning. “I don’t have a date even if I have a raunchy dress.”

“How raunchy?”

“Raunchy.”

“Damn,” she whistled. “There isn’t anyone you want to go with? ‘Cause I have a list of, like, twenty eligible guys.” 

“Thanks but no thanks, dear.” You rested your chin in your hand and reached up to toy with one of your piercings. “I don’t even want to go,” you finally whined, slumping forward and folding yourself in half. Loren patted your giant bun of hair and clicked her tongue.

“You don’t have to go, baby.” She narrowed her eyes at you thoughtfully. “That’s not weird.”

Saturday was on the colder side. The sky was a gray-blue smear and the water was appropriately dark gray and very still. You stared out your window and grumbled at the weather. Behind you, the door opened and a teacher poked their head in to remind you to get your things together “if you plan to leave for vacation.” You were reminded that some students did not leave the island, and instead stayed in the dorms for the two-and-a-half weeks everyone else was gone. So sad, you thought, that they were stuck here for whatever reasons they were. 

“Thanks,” you said and the teacher shut the door. You untangled yourself from your blankets and set to work pulling your suitcase from the closet and stuffing it full of clean clothes. Outside in the hall, you could hear excited voices and footsteps pound past as groups of girls ran down the corridor to the dining hall or wherever. You looked up at the ceiling in exasperation and wondered why your life wasn’t so interesting. 

But it was. You dueled Chazz and you hadn’t died, so that was a plus. Zane Truesdale was a thing. Or something like that. Whatever. You quickly put a bra on to protect yourself from the thin material of your shirt and dragged tight jeans that were too tight over your bare legs. “They must fit!” you hissed to yourself, struggling to button them. When you succeeded, you stared at yourself in the mirror and observed the way your hair was a bush. “Ah, you little bitch,” you mumbled, gathering it into a giant bun on top of your head and tying it there. You shoved shoes on and half-walked, half-ran out of the room.

Down in the dining hall, people were everywhere, all talking at an unnecessary decibel level. You rolled your eyes and pushed your way through until you could reach the tables with the food. Loren was there, in her usual loose tank-top and tight skirt. She whipped around to look at you, her long hair bouncing with the movement. “Aila!” she squealed, but you were right there so it was a little too much. 

“Friend,” you greeted her. She grinned and kissed you on the cheek.

“I’m going over to the Ra dorms after this. Come?” She grabbed at a roll before another student could take it. You casually piled tons of food onto your plate.

“Uh, yeah,” you replied, filling your cup with orange juice. “Why is this?”

Loren dragged you away from the food and toward the tables, where she fell into a chair and set her things before her. After daintily arranging herself and shoving half the roll into her mouth to chew and swallow, she looked up at you from behind her glasses. “To meet my man, obviously.”

“Ah, yes, the man.” You ate your food and then it was suddenly over—you were done and she was done and the two of you stood up and got rid of your plates, and you got to wondering why the days moved so fast.

Outside, Loren pulled you along the path toward the Ra dorms. People in yellow uniforms passed you by, some giving confused looks as to why two non-uniformed Obelisks were going in the other direction. You sighed and let it all happen.

Once at the dorms, she marched up the steps and into the building, whose doors opened into a cafeteria-like place filled with long tables. Loren scooted along the wall until she reached the end of a table where about five guys sat. She tapped one on the shoulder and he jumped, looking over his shoulder to see who it was, and then standing up suddenly in something between embarrassment and excitement.

“Aila,” Loren said with flourish. “This is Caleb.”

The boy smiled at you bashfully and you took a moment to observe. He was short, about your height and definitely shorter than Loren, and had a shock of spiky light brown hair and two very bright, very honey-colored eyes. “Hi,” he said in a small, friendly voice.

You melted. “Hey,” you said, smiling back so he didn’t feel so intimidated by your previously blank expression. 

Loren beamed and wrapped an arm around your shoulder to whisper very softly in your ear, “Isn’t he cute? He’s cute.” You just nodded and Caleb, who had no idea what she was saying, blushed and looked at the ground. You melted again.

“I should go,” you told her, poking her on the nose. “But have fun.” You waved at both of them and quickly escaped. The cool mid-morning air hit you and you rushed down the path toward the warm buildings as fast as you could. 

Back in your dorm, you stared around the room and dug through your books to see if there was anything you’d want to bring back to the mainland with you. You found, sandwiched between a special summons textbook and an art sketchpad, the scientific journal. Picking it up, you turned it over in your hands and flipped open the front cover to read the call number Zane had written on the sticky note. His handwriting looked like a font. 

You crinkled your nose in thought and closed the small book, tucking it under your arm. You looked toward the small fish tank on your desk and observed that your singular blue fish was swimming in lazy circles around a piece of fake kelp. Such a smart little fishy.

“Hello, baby,” you cooed at it, leaning down so you were eye-level with the tank. The little creature swam up to the glass and stared at you blankly with yellow gem eyes. You sighed and stood up. “I need to find you a home for vacation,” you muttered to the fish. Digging through the bin of pet items on the floor, you found a tiny travel tank and scooped the confused blue fish and some tank water into it. “There you go, baby,” you said, setting it down on the desk where the little animal floated there for a moment in disorientation and then began exploring its 5’x5’x5’ home. 

You dragged your suitcase to the door and lovingly arranged the rest of your stuff that wouldn’t fit in the bag in a giant pile in the middle of the room. With the journal still under your arm, you gently plucked up the small travel tank and headed out of the room and down the hall. 

In the main foyer, people were chatting and trying to maneuver around suitcases. You always wondered why nobody seemed to notice the girls-dorms-vs-boys-dorms rule, as both sexes wandered in and out of both dorms. Sometimes, most people ate in the boys’ dining hall and sometimes they ate in the girls’ dining hall. The school might as well have had unisex dorms. 

You picked your way through the crowd, careful not to spill any water, and finally made it out of the building and into the cold sunshine. A girl you recognized from art class stopped you on your way to the quad and shot a short look at your little upset blue fish. “Where are you going?” she asked with a smile. She was a nice girl.

“To return this book to the study room,” you replied, nodding to the item tucked under your arm.

“Are you going to get ready for the dance soon?” she said. “A bunch of girls are doing each others’ hair and makeup soon in the common room.”

“Sounds good. I may come by later if I have time,” you told her. She walked off after a brief goodbye and you felt bad about lying. You looked down at your fish and he seemed to give you a reproachful look. “Stop it,” you hissed at him. 

Few students were on the path that wound back behind the main building to a different entrance. You didn’t usually take this route but the front was so busy that it was really the only safe option. 

Sunlight filtered through the overhead trees, creating a dappled ground. The water in the tank swayed slightly as you made your way down the trail, the blue fish darting from wall to wall as though checking out the scenery. You turned a corner and stopped short. Zane was standing off to the side, looking down at his cell-phone, the expression on his face tense. You frowned and strongly considered turning back around so as not to disrupt this obviously important moment. You pivoted on your heel and peered down into the fishbowl for some semblance of intelligent help from the fish. He just floated there and stared around with his oversized yellow eyes. You sighed in frustration.

“Aila?” a voice said. You snapped your head up in shock to see Zane looking at you, the tense expression gone and replaced with calm nothing. He tilted his head and his eyes smiled. You felt something inside of you drop forever.

“Uh, hey,” you said. You didn’t move. Zane seemed only semi-real, and you were afraid that if you made any sudden movements or noise, he’d unfold wings and disappear in a flurry of blue feathers and wind. 

He didn’t really move either at first, so the two of you stared at each other for a moment until he sighed and shoved his cell-phone in his pants pocket. “How are you?” he asked leisurely, tilting his head.

You pursed your lips at your fish briefly. “I’m doing alright. How are you?”

“I’m doing well, thank you,” he said, almost murmured, and you felt much watched. Just as you managed to pull yourself together and up out of your pit of confusion, he caught sight of the journal tucked under your arm. The most out-of-place smile suddenly appeared on his face. “Ah,” he muttered, advancing toward you calmly and stopping a few feet away. “You still have the journal. Are you returning it?” At your wary nod, he tilted his head again and looked down at you with very cat-like, observant eyes. “Can I see it?” He extended his hand and you handed him the thin volume, which he immediately began flipping through. 

You were keenly aware that you were being hunted, or some approximation of it. He was feline—which was odd, really, because usually you found him very bird-like—and seemingly at ease in this weird area of the forest path near the back of the school. You took a moment to observe that his shoulders were still tensed and a dark glitter was settled far back in his gaze. Maybe you should run, you thought.

Zane looked at you and lowered the book. “It’s very good,” he said, gesturing to it. You weren’t sure he was expecting a response, so you stuck with an affirmative noise and a nod of the head. He accepted that and looked back down at its white and red cover. “What part did you enjoy most?”

Right, like you had been reading it. Though, his question sounded far more amused than it did judgmental. You looked up at him and he was staring right back at you. Oh. “I don’t know,” you sighed. “Fibrinogen. That stuff.” It was the first thing that came to mind and you were almost sure you hadn’t pronounced it correctly. You were horrible.

He looked genuinely surprised. “You read the other studies?”

“Kind of. In passing.” You shrugged. “I didn’t absorb too much though, so don’t quiz me.” You unconsciously reached up and patted your large bun of hair. Zane chuckled suddenly and you almost dropped your fish.

“I won’t,” he said, “don’t worry.” He handed the book back to you and his eyes fell curiously on your tank. 

“Oh,” you said. “This is Tamale. He hates everyone.” You held the little tank up higher so there was better visibility. He gazed down into the water where Tamale swam in jerky circles. “He eats flakes and loves the color blue because he’s so full of himself. Also, he hates the vacuum because it makes his water vibrate.” You made eye-contact with Zane, who was giving you a very amused look. “He’s a difficult fish.”

“Seems like it,” Zane said.

This was surreal. “Well,” you said after a moment of silence, “I’ll go now. I have to return this and get a sitter.” You blinked at him and he blinked back expectantly. “Uh, see you later, maybe. Bye.” You nodded at him and smiled, walking around him and down the rest of the path.

“Aila!” he called, but didn’t really; you may have just been listening too hard. You struggled between whipping around instantaneously as though expecting his call and acting confused. You did neither. You hesitantly looked over your shoulder at him.  Zane gazed coolly at you from the relative shade of the trees, his eyes especially sharp and intense in the off lighting. 

“Yeah?” you asked, feeling highly uncomfortable in the silence.

He half-smiled, the action forming a smirk, and chuckled a bit before answering. “See you later, maybe.” 

You knew he was making fun of your awkward goodbye, but it didn’t really matter because then he waved at you and gave you this look that conveyed something like, “Definitely later,” and turned back around, and you just stood there with Tamale and felt strangely hit-on. “Oh,” you muttered, and went off down your path.

The main hall was pretty damn crowded. You slunk along the wall and quietly made your way to the smaller side hall that led to the study room. A group of Ra students talking in intense whispers passed you by and a few of them stared at you in that peculiar, specific way Ra and Slifer students stared at third-year Obelisks. You gave them a small smile and they looked shocked. Turning the corner brought you to a thick knot of loud Slifers, all in brilliant red and toting a mixture of suitcases, duffle bags and backpacks. You peered at the throng closely and figured there was no way around it—you’d have to go through. You looked at Tamale who looked right back and gave you the most flat-out irritated expression you’d ever seen on a creature that wasn’t Chazz. 

You sighed and then there was a commotion. “Out of the way!” a voice barked loudly, and the group of muttering, grumbling Slifers parted to allow a bristling Chazz Princeton through. Look at that.

The two of you looked at each other and the group fell silent. You were confused until you realized that they had seen the two of you duel and were rapt in watching the two rivals face-off in person. Oh god. “Hey,” you said finally, feeling your bun of hair bounce as you nodded at him.

Chazz’s eyes were especially dead and black. He glanced you up and down and then peered at your fish critically. “Hello, Aila,” he said flatly.

“I see you’re in a good mood,” you said, smiling widely as he blinked blankly at you. He rolled his eyes and crossed his arms with a quiet huff. “Excited for the end of semester?” you asked.

“Not really,” he bit out under his breath, face darkening. His whole aura clouded and you could almost see wisps of smoke rise from his form.

“Why?”

He seemed surprised by the question and took a moment to answer. He measured you with a look. “Because my family is full of shit,” he said in a tone somewhere between hateful and resigned. Then he seemed to collect himself and frowned. “Why do you care?”

You shrugged. “You just looked upset. Is the study room open?” He nodded slowly and you smiled. 

“Well, I gotta go. Sorry about your family being so difficult. Try to have a nice vacation, Chazz.”

You moved to pass him and he stopped you by stepping in front of your path. You looked at him in confusion while the group of Slifers fell under a tense, watchful spell. “Something wrong?” you said.

“Just because you almost beat me in a duel doesn’t mean you need to be so nice,” he said, his characteristically flat black eyes boring into your face. “I don’t need pity from you, Aila.”

You sighed and consulted your fish with a look. “Listen, Chazz,” you began, setting your free hand on his shoulder. Chazz immediately froze and stared at your extended arm suspiciously. “I don’t pity you. You beat me. You just said so. I don’t care that you won.” At that, he gave you a piercing look and you cut off the words rising in his throat. “And by that, I mean that I’m glad you won, because I don’t care about dueling and winning and that stuff. So don’t think that am holding some sort of… bitter grudge against you, because even though I “almost” beat you, I didn’t, and so you shouldn’t think that I am laying in wait to kill you or something because I don’t care.”

Chazz’s deadpan expression didn’t change, but his frown deepened. “You should care,” he reminded you. Then he sighed and rolled his eyes. “Fine, you don’t pity me. Whatever. Just don’t ever think that we won’t duel again. I will beat you definitively next time.”

“Right. Cool.”

Chazz narrowed his eyes at you. “You’d better believe it.”

“I do.” You smiled at him and removed your hand from his shoulder. “Are you going to the dance?”

He seemed genuinely surprised. “… Yeah, why?” His eyes spoke of a deep, deep skepticism toward your honest intentions. 

“Just make sure you have fun. You, like, never smile, so you should do that. Being unhappy is bad for your health. I read about it.” You gestured with your head to the journal tucked under your arm. “Do that?”

Silence. He blinked at you blankly and all traces of anger disappeared from his face, replaced with complete confusion. “I’ll try that,” he said after a while, tone somber and resigned. “Have a nice day, Aila.”

“Have a nice day, Chazz!” You walked around him and through the parted group of Slifer students.

 There was a stretch of quiet as you left and then there was commotion again and Chazz yelled, “Get the hell out of here, you slackers!” and they quieted down into excited whispers. 

You walked as quickly as you could away from the scene and rounded yet another corner. Your heart rate slowed only slightly. Talking to Chazz was one of the most stressful things in the world, you figured. He was just so… intense. You shuddered and then spent a moment trying to keep Tamale’s water from spilling. 

The study room was calm and silent as you slipped inside. Winding your way to the back, you set the journal on the coffee table with the others. Tamale’s tank made a little gurgling noise and you looked down to see him blowing bubbles near the surface of the water. “I feel ya, baby,” you cooed to him.

You needed to find someone to watch your fish for the holiday. Tamale was a beta and he only needed to eat once a week, but still, he was fussy and would most surely be happier with clean water and someone to stare at from beside his kelp. “You aren’t gonna die, friend,” you told him with assurance. “I’ll get you someone.” Tamale gave you no indication he cared.

Back in the hallway, you stared around and tried to think. Some people you knew walked by and they asked whether or not you were getting ready for the dance soon. Blah. You said maybe to all of them and tried to keep the conversation to a minimum. People made you feel pressure to be interesting.

You made your way to the main corridor and immediately caught sight of Caleb. He was standing with his back to you, talking with some other Ra students. You glanced around to see if Loren was nearby. She was not. “Caleb,” you called, coming up behind him. He turned in confusion and, when he caught sight of you, smiled and reached up to tug at his short hair nervously.

“Oh, hello, Aila,” he said shyly, face reddening as his friends looked on in awe. 

Melting. “Are you going away for vacation? Or are you staying?” Ra students had a tendency to stay over holidays and he didn’t appear too affluent—Loren would have said something—so the likelihood of him staying was pretty high. 

“I’m staying” he replied, blinking at you with his wide, innocent eyes. He smiled and when you smiled back his turned shaky and he looked at the floor. “May I ask why?” he said, still examining the tiles.

“Uh, yeah. I’m going away and I have a pet I need watched. He’s really easy. He just needs to be fed once a week and have some of his water switched out a few times. Would you be willing to hold onto him until I get back?” You held Tamale out and Caleb raised his head to stare at the blue fish.

“O-of course,” he said, beginning to glow. You tried to keep it together as he beamed at you. “I’d love to help!”

“Great, thanks!” You handed him the small tank and he took it carefully, gazing down into the water where Tamale floated sullenly, waving his tail and drifting in lazy circles. “I’ll get the food to you somehow. It’s just flakes. It’s whatever. Thank you so much, really.” 

You were worried for a moment considering how red he turned. “A-ah, yeah. Y-you’re welcome,” he mumbled, smiling in embarrassment. You thanked him again and walked off, leaving a flustered Caleb with his excited friends.

Part of you felt bad for pulling rank there, but he was a good choice not only because he may have been an angel on earth but because he would be too worried about upsetting a third-year Obelisk to fuck anything up. You sighed. You were awful, sometimes.

On impulse, you turned back around and called his name. "Caleb!"
 
He jumped and stared around wildly for the voice before catching sight of you. You half-waved at him and said, "I owe you one! Really! And don't let him die, okay?" And just because you were feeling crazy from talking to both Zane Truesdale and Chazz Princeton in one day, you sort of, kind of blew him a kiss. 

He almost dropped the fish but didn't, thank god. Caleb was redder than humanly possible and seemed awfully flustered. "O-okay," he squeaked, and returned the wave much more shyly.

You were enjoying this too much. You winked at him and a girl with a pink dress on and curled blond hair stepped into your vision.

"Hey," she said, her voice a little too sweet-sounding for her apparent age. "You should stick to your own kind, and not bother Caleb." She almost spat the last words, and you could feel possessiveness pour off her in waves. You noticed out of the corner of your eyes that clusters of Ra students had formed close by and were watching intently. It dawned on you that this girl may be the Chazz of the Ra students. If so, this was insane.

You looked her up and down, eyes resting her hands, clenched into white-knuckled fists at her sides. You scrunched your face up and sighed, giving her a sad look.

"You need to turn it all the way down," you told her. 

There was a tense silence as her eyes widened dramatically and then the other Ra students collapsed into fervent whispers, and you heard one boy say, a little too loudly, "Oh, shit, she got told off by an Obelisk!" and the rest of the group gasped almost in unison.

The girl made a facial expression you couldn't decipher. "You think, just because you're an Obelisk, that—ˮ

"I don't think anything," you cut her off, holding up a hand. You tried to give her an understanding smile. "I was talking to a friend. I'm allowed to have friends in other social groups."

This day was an actual mess.

The girl opened her mouth and said something that sounded almost exactly like "You’re a bitch!" but you couldn't be too sure because the words were interrupted by another voice. 

"No, I'm not," you said before you could stop yourself. All of you wanted to slap a hand over your mouth for continuing the conversation, but you didn't, you just gazed at her levelly and raised an eyebrow. "I'm not a bitch for wanting to talk with someone I know, and I'm definitely not a bitch for standing up to you. So, no, I'm not a bitch." You took a step closer to her and from this angle you could see how her jaw was clenched tightly and her blue eyes had become watery but defiant. "So, please, do not call me one," you finished, "if at all possible. Thank you. Have a nice day."

At that, you turned and walked off, leaving the girl standing there in her pink dress, with her clenched fists and jaw and her hair nicely curled for the dance. You knew she would cry, because you would have, but you wanted to get out of there so badly you didn't even consider being sympathetic, at least not for now.

"Oh my god!" you gasped into your hands, once you had made it safely around a few corners and found yourself in the empty space between two staircases. You lifted the bottom hem of your shirt to your mouth and hyperventilated into it. Tears pricked your eyes and you cursed at yourself for being so emotional. 

Adrenaline from being so forward pounded through you, but all it did right now was make it hard to breathe around the lump in your throat. "Jesus," you muttered, wiping at your eyes with your shirt.

You took ten minutes to calm down and then slipped out of the crevice between the staircases. The halls had calmed down and now only scattered clumps of people stood around, some of them already dressed for the dance. You saw a girl walk by in a yellow mermaid gown and high heels. You wondered why dances were even held in the first place.

You slowly made your way back to the front foyer and came upon Crowler, who immediately pinned you with a look and marched over. "Aila!" he said/screeched. "I need to speak with you!" You nodded slowly and smiled at him. Crowler paused and brushed his jacket front off before continuing. "I have some fantastic news," he gushed, beady eyes widening. "I have entered you in a contest."

No. "A what?" you asked, blinking at him. 

"A contest," he replied, making an odd hand gesture reminiscent of cat kneading the air. "I thought about your duel with Chazz and realized that you have some serious potential. So I made note of you to a friend of mine, and he and I agreed that you will be our female representative for the International Youth Dueling Tournament this spring. The one held in Germany." He stared down at you expectantly. 

You opened and closed your mouth a few times. "Oh," you finally managed. "And I will have to... duel?"

"Of course!" he exclaimed, throwing his hands up. "You will be the face of our school! You will be an inspiration for female duelists everywhere!" He sighed contentedly and crossed his arms. "We will win it all, I know it. No way can we fail."

Your stomach seemingly dropped out of your body entirely. "Well, I don't know about that..." You smiled at him nervously and he didn't seem to notice your unease. "Who's the male duelist? There's two of us, right? I'm not dueling alone, right?"

"Obviously not!" he scoffed. "No, you will be dueling with Zane!" At your blank facial expression, he smiled very cat-like and nodded. "I assume you know Mr. Truesdale, both of you being of superior dueling rank," Crowler purred, and you felt a little weird watching him preen to himself. "Not to be confused with the younger Truesdale brother, no, not him, he's horrendous. There's nothing to worry about. Now, I have to go speak with the health inspectors concerning the school's state." He made a face. "Don't think much on it, Aila. We won't start training until after break."

"Of course," you muttered, smiling at him as he sauntered away. A scream steadily rose in your throat. You glanced at the wall clock and decided that the best option for your health and perhaps everyone else's would be to go back to the dorm and roll around on the bed in misery. You rushed out of the front doors as quickly as possible and ran wildly across the quad and down the path to the Obelisk dormitories.

Your rug was awfully interesting. You had been staring down at it, having lay face-down on your bed with your head and arms hanging off. The carpet was maroon and pretty soft, but if you focused real hard and didn't acknowledge it was a rug in the first place, it kind of looked like red sand. You patted it with your palm, and it was definitely not sand. 

You had spent the past few hours alternately breathing deeply into your bedspread and sitting with your forehead pressed against the cool window glass. 

Don't think much on it, Aila. 

"Oh no!" you moaned, kicking the bed uselessly. "No no no no no." You shook your head and your large bun bounced. It was already three o' clock and the dance began at six thirty. You weren't going, you had decided with enough finality to matter about forty-five minutes ago, but you still peered angrily at your closet of unwearable dresses. It wasn't their fault. "Sorry," you told the door. 

Your cell phone rang by your ear and you answered it blindly. "Yeah?"

"Hey, baby girl!"

"Hey, friend."

There was momentary silence as Loren thought. "You're upset about something. What is it? You know you can tell me, baby."

You groaned and looked sadly at your closet door. "I'm dueling in the spring international tournament."

Loren laughed. "What? Oh. Since when?"

"Since ten this morning. Crowler let me know. I'm gonna throw up."

"No, you're not. Don't be silly. You're going to kick ass."

"Don't even." You rubbed your forehead and squeezed your eyes shut. 

Loren sighed and hummed a bit. "Well, that's shit, girl. I mean, you dueled damn fine with that Chazz kid, but, I mean, you're kind of a hot mess. Not that that changes anything, but anyone with eyes can see that you're not feeling the dueling part of dueling."

"Thanks."

"De nada."

You sighed. "I don't know why he didn't choose someone definitely good. I'm hit-or-miss at best." You flopped back on the pillows. "My day is crap, Loren."

"I heard you put some bitch in her place today. Good girl."

"Oh, Jesus. Who told you that? That wasn't meant to happen. I'm not a bad person. I don't do things like that."

She laughed. "The whole Ra student body is talking about it. That girl was, like, the shit, and she's all embarrassed now. Great, because she was all up on my man."

"I only told her to not call me a bitch."

"You made her feel humble, girl. You made her feel ashamed of being so obnoxious. That's good stuff, sister."

"No, it's not," you whined, slapping a hand over your eyes. "Now people are going to hate me."

"No! No they will not! No way! You're the queen, girl. Feel good." She paused. "I have to go, sorry. Some people want to start getting ready for the dance and apparently I'm the only one who knows how to French braid, so..."

"Poor baby."

"Shut up. I love you." She hanged up and you tossed the phone away from you. 

"Why?" you asked the ceiling. It didn't say anything particularly useful back. You flopped back on the blankets and almost instantaneously fell asleep. Upon waking up four hours later, you were astounded at your efficient sleeping skills. “Damn girl,” you said to yourself, stretching groggily across the bed and yawning. 

The room had darkened and was now cast in orange light from the sunset beyond the windows. You checked the digital clock next to the bed. Almost seven. The thought that there was something meaningful and possibly fun going on somewhere close to you made you crinkle your nose up in frustration. Whatever. You didn’t do well with dances. 

You swung your legs over the edge of the bed and caught sight of your deck sitting quietly on the floor near your shoes. You had a bizarre urge to stomp on them but then thought about how they had feelings and it wasn’t really their fault you were such a mess. The next bizarre thought you had was that they deserved a hug for putting up with you. “Jesus, Aila,” you breathed, rolling your eyes and huffing. The dorm supervisors came by later to pick up the bags on large carts, and you set to stuffing the pile of things you didn’t need to bring but didn’t want to have all over the place into the closet unceremoniously until you could find a better place after vacation. Wow, you were especially bad today.

You made a sobbing noise and reached into a secret bag and pulled out a snack bag of cookies. Tonight seemed more and more to be a night of wallowing, and, goddamn it, if you wanted to eat as well then why shouldn’t you be able to? No immediate rebuttal popped to mind and you opened the pack, pulling out a cookie and devouring it. Slipping your shoes on, you grabbed a sweatshirt and walked off down the hall with your food.

The foyer was empty and your footsteps echoed off the high glass ceiling. Looking up, you could see the wash of colored sky above your head, all reds and purples and oranges. Wispy black clouds drifted along and everything seemed like a painted canvas had been thrown over the building, it was so bright. You moved forward and pushed open the doors with a shoulder, stepping out into the cool evening air. Cooler than you thought it might be. You hissed and quickly donned your sweatshirt. 

The quad was quiet as you shuffled across it toward the dock, which was the only place you thought to go where it wouldn’t matter you were alone. It occurred to you that other people must not be going to the dance, but the effort of finding them was too much and you were not really up for that. You sighed and continued toward the water, eating cookies all the way there. The campus facilities crew had helpfully placed trash cans every thirty feet or so—and it was necessary; this student body was stupidly messy—and so, seven minutes later, you tossed your empty snack bag into a can and stepped onto the dock. 

The dock was long and was actually part of a much larger harbor that stretched further out into the bay. The part people spent time on was a giant cement slab built into the side of the island that hanged out over the water but did not actually touch it; the water line came up to about five inches below the bottom of the slab. Steps went from this part down to the part where boats actually docked. All things considered, the dock was a pretty secluded area that was essentially on the water, and that was fine by you.

You made your way onto the giant piece of cement and to the edge that faced the water. The bay stretched out before you in a shimmering panorama of shifting color. You sighed and wondered why other parts of your day couldn’t be nearly as spectacular. 

“Well, would you look at this,” a voice said. You jumped so suddenly you almost toppled into the water below. Spinning to your right, you caught sight of the speaker and almost died. 

Zane looked very relaxed in his black suit pants and crisp, black collared shirt. The fact that he wasn’t wearing any blue confused you for a moment. He blinked down at you and smiled languidly. 

“Seemed you had the same idea as I did…” His voice was on the verge of conversational.

You had no idea what the hell was going on. “You didn’t go to the dance?” you asked, because that was the only coherent thing that came to mind. He shook his head and you pursed your lips. The weird predator-like watchfulness vibe you had got from him earlier was on in full force, and you couldn’t tell if it was because he could sense your nervousness or if you were just insane. Also, maybe he was just into intently staring at people he only had known for three days. Probably not. 

“Can I ask why not?” you said slowly, trying to convey your confusion tonally. This guy was, like, the most sought-after man in the school, literally any girl would want to go to a dance with him, and he was standing out on a fucking dock at seven in the evening in the cold. 

Zane seemed to absorb your train of thought and gave you what were essentially a smile and a raise of an eyebrow. He looked like a goddamn model standing there giving you that look in his fancy clothes. “I don’t like dances much,” he said in a low voice, kind of under his breath, like it was a secret he was letting you in on. You blinked blankly at him and he slid his hands into his pants pockets. “May I ask why you aren’t at the dance?”It dawned on you that the weirdness you were sensing in his voice was playfulness. He was being playful. Zane Truesdale was being playful with you on a dock at seven in the evening in the cold and you had no fucking idea why. 

“I’m bad at dances,” you said bluntly and you swore his eyes glittered in mirth. 

He shrugged and looked over his shoulder briefly in the direction of the Obelisk boys’ dormitory where the dance was happening. Then he looked back down at you. “Out of all the possible things you could be bad at, that seems like an okay one,” he stated, still smiling. “You could be bad at social interaction or tactfulness.”

You weren’t expecting him to be so intellectual on a goddamn dock at seven in the evening in the cold and so you took a moment to respond. “I guess so. But, still, it’s something it would be good to be good at, right?”

Zane looked so amused and pleased by that answer you couldn’t figure out of you should feel offended. “I’d have to agree,” he said after a moment of just observing you. 

“If you’re not going to the dance, why are you dressed up, then?” you asked because that was the only thing that came to mind next and because it was nagging you. He was way too dapper right now, and it was making you uncomfortable. But you supposed he must go through his whole life looking like that.

“I don’t think I’ve ever had a class with you,” he said thoughtfully. You just stared up into his eyes as he stared right back, not even caring that you knew he had changed the subject. He needed to stop smiling. It was flustering you.

“No, we haven’t,” you replied. 

“It’s a shame,” he muttered, really more to himself and outward toward the sunset. You blinked rapidly a few times and leaned toward him, trying to figure out if he had actually said that or if you were dying.

“Why?” you asked incredulously. “Why would that be a shame?”

Zane looked down at you from the corner of his eyes. “You’re pretty interesting.” It was said in the manner one might call a piece of art particularly noteworthy, or the way one might refer to an especially amusing movie. You toyed with the thought that maybe Zane was a psychopath and that would explain the bizarre ‘I’m being hunted’ sensation you got when around him. Or maybe not and you were just disoriented because Zane fucking Truesdale was complimenting you on a dock at seven in the evening in the cold.

You opened and closed your mouth a few times wordlessly. Before you could get any less attractive you placed a hand over your mouth and breathed deeply for a moment. Zane had turned back to face you and when you looked up at him, he was only about two feet away and you had a heart attack.

“You okay?” he asked softly, looking way too amused. 

You narrowed your eyes at him and nodded. “Yes, thank you,” you managed. You sighed deeply and reached up to poke at your giant bun. “I’m not that much of a mess, but thanks for your concern.”

Zane chuckled. “That’s good.” He glanced toward the water for a moment, and, before you could say anything, said, “You are a very good duelist” very seriously and with the most peculiar expression.

Oh god. “But not really,” you informed him. “There are some flukes, but I’m usually pretty basic.” You used all of your mental power to push comprehension waves toward him so he’d just get it, agree and drop the subject. 

It was to no avail. “I disagree,” he said. “I think you’re quite good.”

“That’s relative, though.”

“Not really.” He seemed adamant about this. His eyes were a little too intense as he stared down at you and leaned forward a little. “As an unbiased source, I think you’re very respectable as a duelist.”

An unbiased source? “But what does ‘respectable’ mean? Obviously I’d do well against someone who’s genuinely bad, but I’m not genuinely good on the other end.” 

“Why aren’t you good?” At your confused expression, Zane quickly reiterated. “What makes you think you aren’t any good? There’s nothing to say that.”

“But there is. I lose all the time.”

“That doesn’t mean you aren’t good.”

“It does at this school. Losing isn’t really a relative measure. Losing is losing.”

“Losing a duel doesn’t make you bad. It just makes the other person better. There’s nothing wrong with having other people around who are better than you—ˮ

“But what would you know about that?” 

The moment you said it, you experienced a few trains of thought: the first was that maybe this was some kind of sensitive topic because why wouldn’t it be?—he was stupidly good at dueling after all—and it definitely made it hard for him to connect with other students, the second was that you had just kind of insulted him, but maybe not really, it was hard to tell, and the third was that he probably already knew that. How could he go to this school and not notice that being too good meant that he couldn’t relate to 99% of what the other students went through? He was smart enough to know that.

You opened your mouth to apologize and maybe throw yourself casually into the water in distress, but Zane held up a hand and shook his head for you to stop. 

“I’m sorry,” he said somewhat stiffly, looking anywhere but you and then directly down into your eyes with a fiery intensity that scared you for a moment. “We don’t have to talk about dueling. Sometimes I forget people don’t enjoy it as much as I do.”

You didn’t really know what to do with this information. You didn’t think he needed to apologize, even if he was pushing the topic. What was even going on here? 

“N-no, it’s okay. That’s fine. I mean… I mean if you like talking about it, we can, if that’s where this conversation is going…” You shrugged helplessly and scrunched your nose up. 

Now he looked a little confused. There was a stretch of silence, and then he laughed. Like, actually laughed. Not even like the laughs from before that you thought were real. He laughed and you could actually sense something like happiness and relief in it, and it made you want to laugh, too. You didn’t though, because you were also extremely mystified.

“No, no, that’s alright,” he said around a smile, seeming to try and catch his breath. “Let’s talk about something else. Talking about dueling is very boring, actually.”

“Oh, okay,” you said, still trying to sort your thoughts. 

Zane had regained his composure and his usual calmness appeared again. “What do you want to talk about?” he asked, blinking at you languidly.

You forgot how to speak for a moment. “Um, I don’t know. Oh! The tournament,” you said, making a face. “I guess that’s kind of like talking about dueling, but not really…”

At mention of the tournament, Zane smiled knowingly and nodded. “Crowler must have told you then. It was a surprise to me, too.” When you looked confused, he shrugged. “He’s never pursued it before. I know about the tournament—I’ve meet contestants. But the Duel Academy has never really cared before now.”

“Great.” You frowned and his smile widened. “And I suppose I can’t get out of it somehow…?”

His eyes glittered in mirth. “I would if I could, as well. But it seems there is not. I haven’t looked very hard, though. Maybe something will come up.”

“Let’s pray,” you mumbled. Then you looked up at him. “Why don’t you want to do it?”

He shrugged again. “It’s too much unnecessary work and stress. I rather like to duel on my own terms, and not someone else’s.” 

“So complicated,” you whispered, shaking your head. In truth, the issue wasn’t the fact that you had been forced into it, it was the fact that it had to do with dueling at all. But obviously Zane didn’t have that problem. 

You could hear the loud music pulsing from the boys’ dormitory. Glancing up at the building on the hill, you sighed. “This is so uncomfortable,” you said, pulling your hands into your sweatshirt sleeves. After a moment of silence, you looked over at him to see his eyebrows raised. You went hot. “Ignore that,” you mumbled, reaching up and grabbing your bun out of nervousness and then playing with your piercings. He watched all of this and chuckled under his breath.

“I’m sorry,” he said with a sly smile. “I tried not to disturb you.” He crossed his arms and settled back into himself a little. You took the time to survey him: his shoulders were pulled up a little too high—very tensed, apparently—and his a-little-longer-than-shoulder-length hair was the same oceanic teal as his eyes, which were, you found, the same color as your eyes. This semi-new development was very interesting.

“You didn’t,” you quickly told him when you realized he’d been staring at you, waiting for a response. You sighed very deeply and looked around yourself at the water, cut through with orange and red light, and at the tree-covered island rising behind you. You slowly sank to the ground and sat on the edge of the dock, legs crossed into a pretzel so as not to get wet. You folded into yourself and tried to conserve heat by attempting to burrow further into your sweatshirt to no avail. 

You assumed Zane would get bored of you and walk away, but after a minute or so of silence he, too, sat down on the dock’s edge. You glanced at him inconspicuously from the corner of your eye and saw as he gazed out at the water and looked generally relaxed and impassive.

You had to swallow before you tried to speak. “What were you going to do?” you asked. “Instead of going to the dance, what were you going to do on the dock?” This was said softly and perhaps hesitantly, as you didn’t know whether or not he was done with talking, but the question was eating at you and it seemed like an important one. 

He tilted his head and eyes toward you leisurely and half-smiled. “Nothing at all.”

“You were just going to… be here?” You guessed that was what you were going to do, too, but you had always assumed Zane might have some important thing going on and didn’t have time to just ‘be,’ and maybe he’d come down to make phone calls or think Deep Thoughts or just be generally classy and composed. Normal people did nothing at all sometimes, but Zane was not normal.

“I was,” he replied under his breath. The predatory look returned and his normally placid, pool-like eyes were sharp and glittering and turned on you with a hawk-like intensity. 

You scrunched your face up in confusion and nodded slowly. “What are you doing for vacation?” you asked compulsively. 

Zane looked significantly surprised at the question. You wondered if anyone had ever had the chance to ask the Zane Truesdale about mundane things like vacation. It didn’t seem like the type of thing his usual companions would talk about. 

“I’m going to Bora Bora,” he said. 

“Bora Bora?” you squeaked. “What—What are you going to do on Bora Bora?”

Zane shrugged halfheartedly. “My father has business there.”

“Business on a tropical island?”

“Yes.”

You tried to make sense of that in your head, but the image of men in suits walking along white-sand beaches blocked a lot of your thinking power. “Oh,” you managed, blinking the scene away. “Th-that must be nice…”

He made a face and shrugged again. “I guess. The weather is very beautiful.”

“I’m sure it is…” There was a pause while he looked out at the bay and you stared at him intently. When he made eye contact with you, you jumped in shock. 

“What are you doing for vacation?” he questioned, giving you a decisively searching look.

You frowned. “Nothing. I’m going home and sitting around and eating. It’s going to be super eventful.”

He tilted his head slowly and blinked. “I don’t think I’ve ever had a vacation where I did nothing.” He seemed to consider something. Then he smiled at you almost coyly, or maybe that was just his natural smile. “You don’t sound too excited…”

You groaned and rolled your eyes, slapping your hands over your face. “It’s going to be so boring,” you mumbled. You sat there like that for a minute and then slowly lowered your hands to see him peering at you in amusement. You reddened and returned your hands to your face quickly. “What?” you asked, voice muffled by the fabric of your sweatshirt.

He chuckled. “We could trade,” he muttered, voice heavy with some mix of sarcasm and delight. 

“I don’t look good in a bathing suit.”

He laughed at that, a genuine one. Laughed for a while, and then he stopped and sighed. There was a multi-minute-long silence in which you dropped your hands and just stared at the bay and he closed his eyes and sat there placidly. The bass-heavy music from the dance could be heard faintly from the glass-walled building on the side of the hill. You looked over your shoulder at the place and saw colored lights emanating from it. Part of you wanted to be there and part of you had no idea why you thought that and subsequently realized none of you wanted to be there, and why should you, because Zane Truesdale was having a weird bonding moment with you on a dock at seven (actually more like eight now) in the evening in the cold, which was getting progressively colder. No, this was fine; you were just embarrassed to think so. 

When you returned to the real world, you realized he was staring at you calmly. “Yes?” you prompted cautiously, lest he become agitated and flee into the forest or fall into the water or something.

“Our eyes are the same color,” he said, voice thoughtful. You froze and stared owlishly at him. He examined your face openly and tilted his head in the other direction.

“Yeah, they are,” you wanted to say, but Zane leaned very close suddenly and held up a hand for you to quiet.

“I’m going to kiss you,” he said.

All of your internal organs evaporated or exploded or something like that. “W-what?”

Zane gave you a very matter-of-fact look. “I’m going to kiss you,” he reiterated. You sat there in complete shock as he leaned in and pressed his lips to yours solidly. You closed your eyes reflexively and tried very hard to calm down in case you began hyperventilating. He reached a hand up and lightly held one side of your face, and all of this was very warm and very surreal. Then all of it stopped and suddenly he wasn’t kissing you anymore, his hand was gone, and you were sitting there catatonic while he stared at you from about a foot away. 

You blinked and knocked yourself back into the real world. You made wide eyes and impulsively touched your mouth. Zane licked his lips slightly and blinked very cat-like. “That was good, I’d say,” he said quietly, voice a lilt and on the edge of amused.

“S-sure,” you barely got out. You thought your throat may have closed up it was so hard to breathe. But then the feeling passed and you just felt light. He was still gazing at you with an animal intensity. You sighed and reached up to toy with an earring. “Well,” you said. “It’s good we got that out of the way, huh?”

“Oh, yes. Now we won’t have anything hanging between us.” It was so obviously sarcasm, you couldn’t believe he was being sarcastic. He smirked at you easily. “It’s all very comfortable now, right?”

You were suddenly exhausted. “Not exactly,” you mumbled, toying with the idea of falling unconscious as an escape strategy. 

He didn’t say anything but smiled at you languidly. This silence went on for a good two minutes and you just stared between him and the bay. The heavy thump of bass vibrated faintly over the trees and you focused very hard on that peculiar sensation in an attempt to distract yourself from the intensity of his gaze, which was making your skin busy. 

He sighed. “Well, this turned out better than I imagined it would,” he said thoughtfully, turning his eyes to the water. 

“How did you imagine it?” 

“Boring.”

“I’m glad I could entertain you.” 

“Me, too.” The look he gave you was, at the least, appreciative. You chose to pointedly ignore it and instead stare down at your hands which were groping each other in your lap. 

“Could we, like, make this not awkward,” you deadpanned after a moment. 

He chuckled. “Of course. What would you like to talk about, then?”

“I don’t know.”

“Well, me neither.”

“Think a little harder,” you told him. “Come on, you’re the smart one here.”

He smiled widely, his eyes glittering dark in the waning light. He leaned toward you, resting his weight on a bent elbow. As this happened, you glanced down and realized that this movement had pulled the fabric of his crisp black shirt in the direction of one shoulder and you could clearly see his pale skin pulled taut over his collar bone. 

“I’m going to kiss you again,” he said.

“You’re very thin, you know that?” You blinked at him as he gave what you supposed was a look that would have sent any other girl but you into spontaneous orgasm. 

Zane stared at you for a moment and then laughed. “You’re funny,” he said, sitting upright and brushing a hand through his turquoise hair. Then he gave you a very cat-like look. “This is much better than the dance would have been, Aila.”

“Oh, I’m sure.” You didn’t know what to do with yourself. You didn’t think he knew what to do either.

Zane sighed. After a moment, he pushed himself to his feet and extended a hand to help you up. You took his grasp and felt yourself get pulled to standing position by an unexpectedly strong force. Out of nowhere, and before you could register it, Zane was standing very close to you and he leaned down until his bright, predatory eyes were on the same level as yours. You felt everything freeze and your breathing slow, but your heart rate shot through the roof and you wondered briefly if you were dying. 

He smiled and you could see the delight light up his oceanic eyes like blue cracks of lightning. “Have a nice vacation, Aila,” he said practically under his breath but very intently and clearly. 

“Yeah,” you breathed, too afraid to make much noise with him so close. “You too, Zane.”

The smile in his eyes was overwhelming but his face had reverted to its odd, usual placidity. “Thanks,” he whispered somewhat playfully, reminding you once again that this absurd interaction was taking place on a dock at eight in the evening in the cold, and it was all very fucking ridiculous.

He kissed you again, kind of aggressively, and, in all honesty, your brain shut off and the most you could comprehend was the push and the heat and the feeling of his hand on your lower back. When he pulled away after almost a minute you tried to find your footing and not fall into the water, and then you looked up at him and realized your breathing was very heavy.

He looked extremely pleased or sated or one of those things. Both of those things. You felt heat consume your face and you wiped at your mouth with the back of your sweatshirt sleeve since your lips felt a little too tingly for your liking. “Is this what you usually do when you don’t go to dances?” you asked, voice muffled by the fabric. 

“No,” he said, blinking languidly. A small smirk pulled itself across his face. A device on him beeped and he made no indication he heard it. “I have to go now, unfortunately. We can continue this after the new semester resumes, I guess, if that’s what you’d like.” He seemed to chuckle at your confused, flustered squeak. “Have a nice vacation, Aila.”

“Yeah, you too, Zane.” You sighed deeply and tucked your hands into your sleeves, watching as he turned and walked off in the other direction down the dock toward the private boats, giving you a small, nonchalant wave as he did so. You waved back even though he couldn’t see. 

You crinkled your face up in confusion. “Whatever,” you whispered dully, feeling an odd combination of butterflies and hurricanes pick up in your stomach. You then turned and made your way up the slope toward the dorms for the evening.