It’s an apology that the world owes to Dazai, or so Chuuya thinks.

And they were both dealt shitty cards but, at least—

At least they have each other.

Maybe not like they /used/ to, maybe not /completely/, but they are not alone anymore.

They will never be alone again.
“Thank you,” Dazai murmurs, buried into the hug. His voice is detached.

Chuuya hesitates, wondering if he has the right to pry before asking: “Is your guardian the boss?”

Dazai shudders.

“I think it might be a council of executives, now, with Mori among them. I never asked.”
“No wonder you avoid him.”

“You have no idea.” Dazai snorts. “Mishima was the first time I openly acknowledged the Port Mafia.”

The alpha sighs, pushing his cheek against Chuuya’s shoulder.
It’s dry, though the gesture is an obvious request for comfort— one that has Chuuya
squeezing Dazai harder in his arms. “Ah, I was asked to take that seat. Mori tried. And the government pressed for a… amicable boss and a peaceful coexistence, I think. They wouldn’t have bothered offering Ango as a babysitter, otherwise.”

“But you…?”

“No. I always said no.”
Not a tinge of hesitation rings in Dazai’s words — and, although Chuuya realized he may not read the alpha as well as he thought, he’s pretty sure Dazai doesn’t /want/ to join the Port Mafia.

Oh, he’d be a good leader. Chuuya can see it.

But would he /survive/ that role?
“Is that a job you just get to refuse?” Chuuya asks, rubbing soothing circles in Dazai’s scalp. “Can you just say no?”

“As far as I know, yes,” the alpha allows, weakly. “I suspect nobody is /that/ eager to shove their power on /me/.”

“Well, that’s good.”
“/You/ will never have to worry about it,” Dazai adds — almost hurriedly, and much louder than before. “I will never let this… predicament touch you.”

Reluctantly, Chuuya lets go of the alpha.

He pushes back, putting some safe, /much needed/ distance between him and Dazai.
For the first time, he can see how much /responsibility/ rests on the boy’s shoulders. A powerful alpha bloodline, an innate leadership attitude, and a bottomless/darkness/.

And the idiot is worried for him.

/God/.

“Are you stupid?” He blurts out, staring at the other.
Dazai blinks, taken aback.

“Eh?”

“Do you think that’s what I’m worried about?”

“…I suppose?”

“Oh my /god/, you /Mackerel/,” Chuuya says, rolling his eyes to the ceiling. “Who cares if I meet any of these assholes. But what about you? What if anybody comes looking for /you/—“
“That’s what Ango and Odasaku are for. But— I used to think I didn’t care.” Dazai halts, eyes so devoid of light that for a second the omega doesn’t even recognize the boy he /loves/, and Chuuya’s heart /stutters/.

“Don’t say that.”

He moves closer, but Dazai shakes his head.
He seems to keep Chuuya at distance — not to avoid him, but to make sure the redhead listens.

“It’s /true/, Chuuya. But now, most of the time, I want to live.” He stares, and the knot in Chuuya’s throat tightens. He leans forward. “I want to live thanks to you.”
/I want to live thanks to you./

It’s a daunting responsibility, to have someone’s life on your shoulders. To have /Dazai’s/ life on your shoulders.

And, especially while they are not even together, Chuuya is not sure how much he can /accept/ those words.

Not when there’s
someone else in the picture who kept Dazai alive just as much as him. /More/ than him.

“What about the bond with Oda? Ango said…”

Immediately, Dazai seems to shut down. He retreats against the couch’s back as if the question bit him, all grey fabric and white bandages and even
paler cheeks.
He appears /slapped/ by Chuuya’s voice even though it was barely a whisper.

“Ango should learn to shut up.”

“Dazai—“

“It’s just—” He drags a deep breath, sinking a little more in his clothes. “There is no easy way to say that; I spent some ruts with Odasaku.”
Chuuya flinches, letting the realization sink /in/, nausea grasping his stomach.

It’s not possible.

/It’s not—/

But Dazai shakes his head immediately.

“Not the /physical/ part of them,” he explains, scanning every word with unnatural quietness. “I am not going to lie, I
wouldn’t have minded back then, but he was never interested in escalating our friendship.

And I love Odasaku, but I was never /in love/ with him. It just— never developed that way.”

Chuuya swallows.

“Ok,” he whispers, just to remind himself that he still has a voice.
/It just never happened/.

How ironic and cruel life can be, though. How fast can things change.

A familiar sense of loss crawls up the omega’s spine, reminding him how /easy/ it would have been for things to develop differently.

It’s difficult, to share Dazai’s heart with
someone else. It’s painful.

Chuuya closed his hands around that heart and claimed that little, lonely muscle for himself, never knowing Odasaku always owned some of it.

That he’ll /always/ own some of it.

And /that’s/ the part Chuuya — used to betrayal — struggles to accept.
He can work with Oda for Dazai’s sake, showing two very different kinds of support to the man they both love. He can /trust/ him, and Dazai.

But he can’t stifle the jealousy completely.

He can’t shut out that voice that tells him he’s sharing something he shouldn’t share.
He can’t silence that whisper hissing that Dazai will inevitably see that Oda is— better. Kinder.

That his best friend is there, and an omega and fully functioning.

But Dazai seems to notice all the emotions tossing and stirring in the redhead, because his expression softens.
“You know, Chibi… the irony of it is that I knew I was never in love with Odasaku when I met you,” the alpha adds, eyes searching for Chuuya’s blue gaze. His lips curl subtly up. “I couldn’t be sure before.

I /learned/ that difference when I realized I was falling for you.”
When Chuuya tries to swallow — swallow down the emotions and everything said so far, and all the information suddenly dumped on him — he finds his tongue heavy, his spit like sandpaper down his throat.

The conversation is starting to be /overwhelming/.

Tsujimura is waiting.
And yet he can’t /move/, glued to the floor and hungry for /reasons/. For reassurances that are not his to take, because /Dazai/ is not his anymore.

(And he keeps forgetting.

God, he needs to /stop/ forgetting that.)

Seeing that the omega won’t reply, Dazai shrugs.
He hides his fingers into the sleeves of the hoodie, toying with his hands as if to exorcise another demon of his past.

Another monster he could never slay.

“Still, my ruts are a stark business. They work as an amplifier for emotions. And if I feel destructive—I /try/ things.“
/So what? Everybody tries kinky stuff during ruts/.

That’s what Chuuya is about to say. That’s what he /almost/ says.

Then he looks at Dazai, though, and /sees/ him.

It all clicks, like scattered pieces of a dark puzzle: Oda calming Dazai, saving him when he tried to—

/Oh/.
“Did you…?” Chuuya hesitates mid-way, unable to finish the sentence.

He knows the answer already, but it’s time to hear it out loud. It’s time Dazai /admits/ it.

Yet, asking that— it sounds so /wrong/. There is no way to go about it delicately, really.
TW // mention of suicide

/ Did you try to end your life? /

But the tiny hope — the assumption Dazai would never /act/ on his impulse, that he’d prepare and /prepare/ and never act — winks out when the alpha nods.

A nod; that’s all it takes.

A silly movement of the head.
That overflowing bathtub; money and phone thrown in the river; hating himself; all the things he knew are just /confirmed/.

“Ruts are about impulses,” Dazai says. “Not only sex. So you see my issue.”

Ruts are not only about sex, just like bonds are not always about /romance/.
Most ruts are about letting go, losing control.

And if some /things/ crawl free…

“Does it only happen during ruts?” Chuuya asks, though he’s not sure he wants to know.

“I—“ Dazai shakes his head, dark strands covering his eyes. “I think it’s always lurking, but during
ruts I have less control over myself. Odasaku is the only omega I trusted for a long time.”

Ruts are about /instinct/.

“I didn’t know.”

Bonds are about control. Support. /Trust/.

“I didn’t want you to know. I didn’t want you to be burdened by it yet.”

Mutual. Fucking. Trust.
“So that’s /Oda’s/ burden?” Chuuya snaps, a little harsher than he intended to. He can see Dazai flinch — it’s then that the redhead’s shoulders flop, and forces himself to keep /calm/. “Look, I shared all my problems and secrets with you. That’s what a /partner/ is for.”

“...”
A partner Dazai obviously never had before. Right.

“Let’s start again,” Chuuya says, counting Dazai’s demons on the tip of his fingers. They are a little less scary if they face them together. “You thought I would leave because of /what/? Your parents? Your ruts? Your shadows?”
“All that, yes.”

“Dazai,” he calls, softly, “I still care, and you’re telling me /now/.”

“…Yes?”

Chuuya’s lips curl into a pout, the heat spreading across his cheeks telling him he /blushed/ a little.

“And do I look like I’m going to leave anytime soon? Because I’m not.”
How could he believe Chuuya would leave? After what /he/ shared?

The truth is, Chuuya just doesn’t understand Dazai. The double standards in the alpha’s head are unbelievable.

Chuuya’s worth saving.

Chuuya is—

(“Chuuya is /my/ omega,” Dazai said.)

Chuuya is worth loving,
listening and protecting. Dazai, in his own eyes, is just… a lost cause.

Because of that self-hatred and destructive attitude their fall out was gradual, then sudden. And, now, Chuuya just can’t find an answer anymore.

He’d gladly shake the alpha up and shout and /slap/ him.
Because, for someone who says he’s empty, Daza feels so /much/— it’s just all negative.

It’s all darkness.

And Chuuya would like to be surprised and shocked and horrified, but he’s not.

He always knew about Dazai’s suicidal thoughts and irregular ruts, he just never
Connected them.

A connection long in the making that is way more rooted in trauma, solitude and abandonment than Chuuya ever imagined.

And no, it’s not surprising—

—but it /hurts/ all the same.

“Look. I’m not saying you can’t need Oda,” Chuuya mutters, taking advantage of
the uneasy silence to search for the right wording to express what’s actually nagging him. “Obviously you guys have history. It’s /ok/. All I’m saying is, this is exactly the kind of thing you explain.
These are the things you /share/.”

Dazai barely looks at him at all and
when he speaks, his voice is almost /shy/ as he explains.

“I wanted you to meet Odasaku first; I wanted you to see why and /how/ I care about him.”

Chuuya snorts.

So that’s what Dazai meant when he said that he wanted Chuuya and Oda to get along.
How Dazai-esque of the dumb Mackerel to expect Chuuya to fall in love with Odasaku’s personality enough to ignore everything else.

The end that justifies the mean, right?

And Chuuya might accuse the alpha of being dense and self-centered, but he crosses his arms instead.
He can sense an impeding migraine closing like an iron crown around his temples.

“Some mental preparation might have been nice.”

Dazai nods.

“Call that an error of evaluation.”

Chuuya clicks his tongue. He’s late already, and Tsujimura will smack him for it, yet he can’t
tear his gaze away.
He’s glued in place, fearing they’ll talk now or never.

Plus, whoever said commutation was /relaxing/ never met Dazai.

This is not a heart-to-heart, Chuuya thinks; this is a marathon.

A marathon where he crawls upwind and Dazai punches him at every turn.
“Was it really never—“

“No,” Dazai says, eyes widening as he almost /cries/ the word out. Urgency is a new shade on the alpha’s face, one Chuuya never saw before. “Like I said, it was never sexual.”

“But it was intimate,” Chuuya points out.

“Yes.”

“And you share a /bond/.”
/A real bond.

One more real than the one we (not) share now./

Dazai tilts his head. “Now you know the reason.”

“He saved your life.”

(Naturally formed bonds between an alpha and an omega can — and often are — stronger than bond marks.)

“Yes.”

(They may last longer.)
“He seems a… nice person.”

(Some friendships are so deep, so structured, that love pales in comparison)

“He /is/. Chuuya— I said he is my family, and I stand by it.”

The omega stalls, moving his weight from one foot to the other.

“Just friends, huh,” he murmurs to himself.
He has to admit that there is a sense of catharsis in finally knowing the truth — /Dazai’s/ truth.

What seemed so scary just a few weeks before is slowly morphing into a story of its own.

He wants to believe the words and truths woven into this tale of a sad, sad life.
Even if he’ll need time to heal and mend his pride, Chuuya is /eager/ to return that foolish, stupid believer he was when Dazai first told him they would be something beautiful.

That they could be /seriously/ forever.

“Chuuya, I /promise/, you have nothing to worry about.”
But forever ended like it always does.

“I’m not—“ Chuuya stops himself before he can downright lie. That’s bullshit. He is worried and in love. But he also has no jurisdiction over Dazai’s choices. “Look, I’m already late and it’s none of my business. You’re a single alpha now.”
Dazai flashes him a grin that should have been cocky once, but that looks like a pale imitation of the boy Chuuya knows.

“A very patient alpha,” he corrects.

…Ah. He forgot how charming and stubborn Dazai can be.

“Look, ‘Samu, I’m not ready to try again just now.”
They /can’t/.

What if it doesn’t work /again/? What if it turns out they are just incompatible?

No, no.

Chuuya needs a time out. He needs to go out with Tsujimura, eat, get drunk.

He needs to be a friend to Dazai until they find a way to make this work— to make this /last/.
Until then…

“I understand that. But— I will wait. A year, a decade, I don’t care.” As he says that, Dazai stares right into Chuuya’s soul. His eyes /glimmer/, ripples of gold in the hazelnut of his irises, and a jolt rushes down the omega’s spine. “However long it takes.”
Now, let’s be honest… it definitely didn’t take a decade.

It didn’t even take a month.

Because Chuuya is only human, and Dazai is handsome and frustrating and lovely and stupid. And a mackerel.

And with such soft lips and irritating habits and—

/But let’s go in order./

Just like he imagined, the gargantuan amount of information still crushes Chuuya’s chest while he’s out.

Tsujimura is talking and filling his glass but, under the surface, everything Dazai said is sinking slowly into the omega’s marrow.

He’s unsettled.

But—

//I’ll wait.//
But he’s also hopeful.

//However long it takes.//

That night, even though he’s alone in his nest, Chuuya can finally sleep without exhausting himself with crying.

When he comes home, the light in Dazai’s bedroom is on.

Promising to himself that he’ll say hi to Dazai in the
morning, Chuuya tiptoes to his room. He plops on the bed with a relieved sigh.

/He’ll go back to Kouyou’s to get his plushie/, he thinks as he rolls onto the mattress and tugs himself under the freshly changed covers.

He can’t sleep well without holding on to Dazai’s present,
normally, but the bed — /their/ bed — still smells like the alpha.

Like whisky and crisp paper and rain.

So Chuuya sleeps.

And, as he sleeps, the omega has the strangest dream.

It starts with Dazai as a mafia boss, and himself by his side; his lover, his second-in-command.
Of course, that’s just /stupid/.

Chuuya can barely manage a coffeeshop, what damages would he do to the /mafia/?

And the redhead can’t remember much after, but he vaguely reckons the dream featured a /very/… alluring Dazai.

Not that he needs unwanted nocturnal hints to be
reminded that he’s still fully, utterly and stupidly pining for the alpha.

/Anyway/. There were also superpowers, Oda and… weretigers?

Akutagawa with a /sassy shadow/ that darts out of a coat?

It’s obviously all Tsujimura’s fault. He must have been seriously drunk.
But the dream vanishes with the first rays of a new day, leaving Chuuya to deal with the matter at hand: how to survive a Shitty MackerelTM without giving in to the temptation of kissing him.

As it turns out, Chuuya is not exactly a /champion/ of self control.
It’s difficult not to give in to the need to touch Dazai.

It’s especially hard not to wrap his hands around the alpha’s lanky body in the morning — when Dazai pads into the kitchen, yawning and stretching.

His bed hair is a disgrace, as it always is when the alpha actually
sleeps, and he’s wearing a navy blue PJs peppered with tiny red crabs.

Obviously, he looks terrible, Chuuya’s mind lies.

/He’s adorable/, his heart whispers.

It’s purely out of interest (he swears!) that Chuuya finds himself staring at every detail in the alpha’s figure.
He drinks them in greedily, searching for changes — even the tiny ones.

He wishes he could smooth the wrinkles in the fabric and run his hands through the messy strands.

He wishes Dazai could lean on him and whine that he’s /sleepy/, that he doesn’t feel like studying today.
(When does he /ever/?)

He wishes he could unwrap the bandages peeking out from Dazai’s collar.

And, as it turns out, it’s hard to say ‘good morning’ without a kiss, or ‘goodbye’ without leaving a peck on Dazai’s cheek.

Chuuya is used to their routine, by now.

He /misses/ it.
Chuuya is mulling over how /much/ he gave those kisses for granted when Dazai interrupts his thoughts.

He has the audacity to even offer him a drowsy smile before closing the fridge.

It’s absurd.

He basically holds milk in one hand and Chuuya’s /dignity/ in the other.
“Did you have fun with your friend?” Dazai asks, gently, /politely/.

There’s a certain delicateness in Dazai engaging in polite conversation — he’s relaxed, but also detached. He’s /elegant/.

And Chuuya, being the absolute champion he is, is so taken aback that almost chokes
on his latte. Some of it dribbles past his bottom lip, dirtying his t-shirt with a lukewarm, light brown stain.

And— /great/.

He just burbled like a fucking baby.

Which is pretty fucking ridiculous, because all Dazai did was trying to make conversation like a /human being/.
Dazai chuckles, pouring milk in a tall glass. “Bad morning?”

“Bad life,” Chuuya growls, grabbing a napkin to rub the stain on his t-shirt. “But it was fun. Tsujimura is great.”

“Hm.”

“And I’m still drunk; that’s why I just spit coffee on myself. That was for your information.”
Dazai lifts an eyebrow.

“/Clearly/.”

“Don’t talk to me.”

“Or you’ll spit more coffee on yourself?”

“/Definitely/ don’t talk to me,” the omega repeats, though without any actual bite, drowning in his mug.

You see? It’s torture, being back in this stupid house.
He’s pretty fucking sure Dazai’s ancestors weaponized their charms — either they never shut up, or made their enemies miserable with their stupidly handsome faces and long limbs.

“Chuuya…?”

“I’m trying to focus,” the redhead mumbles.

“On what?”

“/Existing/.”

Since Dazai
asked so nicely, the omega thinks about saying something about Tsujimura.

He could tell Dazai how she dyed her hair mint blue in school and got suspended.

She never changed that color, though.

How they met. He could say she’s studying law in Europe. How she wanted to
become /someone/, change the world.

But Chuuya doesn’t give in to Dazai’s curious side-glances.

In fact, he acknowledges Dazai as little as he can.

Otherwise he’ll remember how it was to kiss him in the morning, warm lips and lazy hands resting on the small of Dazai’s back.
Still, Chuuya manages to stay away. He has no idea how.

It’s unfair.

How is he supposed to live laugh love under the sight of Dazai being… well, his usual handsome self? With his tiny crabs, too.

In a fair world, he supposes, Dazai should have gotten /ugly/ when he turned
into an ex. He shouldn’t be a goddamn temptation.

(To be fair, not even Mishima became ugly after they broke up. He remained rotten as fuck, though.

Dazai, instead, unveiled a fragility Chuuya could only peek at before.)

/Anyway/.

Breakfast goes as badly as Chuuya expected.
Since he has time before his shift — and an annoying post-hangover headache surging in his nape — the omega forces himself not to rush.

He remains perched on his favorite stool, petting his latte and occasionally taking a sip.

Dazai practically /inhales/ his sweetened milk.
Which is to say, four tablespoons of sugar in a glass of fridge-cold milk.

At eight in the morning.

Chuuya supposes that there is absolutely nothing wrong with that, aside from the fact that it’s disgusting, overly sweet and a /very/ good way to flirt with a stomachache.
(And yet, would he still kiss the idiot even if he tasted like disgustingly sweet milk?

Of course.)

“I’m late,” Dazai hums almost to himself, sitting the empty glass in the sink.

Chuuya nods.

He /remembers/.

Dazai always has an early class on Wednesday.

He would also
always finish around four to stop by the café, though.

Not that Dazai going to do that today, of course. He has no reason to, since they are not together anymore.

Plus, Ryuu might stab him with the panini tongs.

“Get moving then, /genius/,” Chuuya replies.
It’s drawled out with all the calmness of someone who doesn’t have to show up at work before a couple of hours, and Dazai /pouts/.

“I could skip today~”

“Oh? Are you going to prove Ranpo right?”

Dazai stops to ponder over it, and his scowl deepens.

He squints, as if
Deciding how much power he should give to an academic rivalry — and if it’s worth a day of rest.

“I’m not sure…”

“Because he /is/ a bit smarter than you, you know?” Chuuya presses on, knowing exactly where to aim and how to load his words.

Dazai’s eyes widen.

“/Chibi/!”
The omega waves him away without lifting his gaze from his mug.

“Then chop chop, so you can prove /me/ wrong too.”

/So I’ll stop daydreaming about combing your stupid hair/.

“Do I get something in return?” Dazai sing-songs.

Chuuya’s hand freezes. The idiot it /teasing/ and
Chuuya knows /exactly/ where this is going. He scrunches his nose, though, pretending to ignore the subtext.

“Academic recognition?”

“I meant—“

Chuuya shrugs. “I can call you a good boy, I guess? Like a dog.”

Dazai’s chest deflates, his shoulders sag.

“Boo! I hate dogs!”
That’s what makes Chuuya smile — remembering /this/ Dazai.
He knows something about the alpha, still.

Something that will never belong to Oda, or Mori, or Ango or the mafia.

How to make /his/ alpha react, how to make him pout and croon.

“I /know/,” he drawls trough a smirk.
It’s reassuring to know that — somewhere, buried under the recent revelations — survives a scrap of domestic life that it /theirs/.

Dazai sighs but silently disappears into his room to change, defeated and a pouting like a misbehaved puppy.

If he heard Chuuya
mumbling “spoiled brat” under his breath, he doesn’t comment.

He drags his feet like the drama queen that he is, though, and Chuuya /snorts/.

/He’s such a baby/, he thinks — fondness roiling in him, even if it’s tainted by the now familiar ache.

When Dazai walks back in the
kitchen, less than ten minutes later and /still/ looking like he’d rather choke than be a productive member of society, the omega hasn’t moved from his spot.

He actually has no intention to—

until he /sees/ Dazai.

He sucks in a breath.

First, the dark blue pants. It would
be a /cool/ choice of clothing, if it didn’t highlight the alpha’s stupidly long and well-shaped legs. It’s a shameless hit at Chuuya’s sanity.

Then, there’s a pink metallic hair pin that keeps one strand of Dazai’s hair secured to the side.

That one is weirdly cute.
But he’s also wearing one of Chuuya’s favorite shirts; light blue, striped.

The one he was wearing during the end of his heat, the omega realizes with a pang at his chest.

His scent still lingers on the cotton like a ghost embrace.

And the collar is an absolute /mess/.
“You’re going out like that?” Chuuya asks, hoping he’ll sound casual when he actually feels desperate.

There’s a pull that tugs him to the alpha, and it’s /strong/.

Dazai blinks.

“Yeah? Why?”

“God, you’re unbelievable,” the redhead mutters, walking to the alpha.
Dazai bends down, obediently letting Chuuya uncurl the collar.

He did it a thousand times before, never caring much, but it feels different now.

The air seems electric, the silence thick.

Chuuya’s fingers are swift, but Dazai’s breath lingers over the back of his hands.
“Ah. That.”

Chuuya squints, focusing on smoothing the front of Dazai’s collar.

The flowery, intense notes of his heat linger even after a couple of washes, mixed with Dazai’s scent.

He can recognize speckles of Oda’s scent in there, now, but he can also sense /himself/.
And he doesn’t know why he’s whispering as he says: “Just because you’re handsome it doesn’t mean you can put zero effort into details, y’know.”

“Hm.”

“You’re lucky I’m back to save your ass.”

“Yes. Thank you, Chibi,” the alpha whispers, voice hoarse. /Dazed/.
A subtle grin curls Chuuya’s lips.

“You’re such a shitty baby.”

“And Chuuya’s short.”

/Yet you always get down to my level./

“Ugh. Shut up and don’t move,” the omega says, instead.

He gently frees some of Dazai’s strands from the collar, mentally thinking the brunet should
cut his hair soon.

It’s soft, and only lightly curly, but long enough to be tied in a bun again.

And he /missed/ the domesticity. The tenderness of the little gestures. Taking care of each other.

It’s a reminder that it wasn’t /only/ lies.

Chuuya steps closer.
He lifts his head, peeling his gaze off Dazai’s shirt to look at him in the face. Lips parted, hands frozen.

No sound but the deep, drumming crooning from the bottom of Dazai’s chest.

And—

He raises on the tip of his toes, his lips /close/ to Dazai’s in an almost-kiss.
The alpha doesn’t move, only raising a hand to lightly touch his fingers to Chuuya’s hip.

The omega holds his breath.

His body shudders, and a gentle purring leaves his mouth as Dazai lifts his arm to brush Chuuya’s cheek.

The pads of his fingers are featherlight on
Chuuya’s burning skin, almost scared to ruin the moment — to shatter it like a dream.

A dream that makes Chuuya /quiver/.

Dazai seems to /know/ that moving now would mean returning to reality, or letting go completely.

The caress is barely there, but it speaks volumes.
The omega leans /in/ a little more, his brain high with the hangover and Dazai’s scent.

He stares at the alpha’s mouth, mesmerized, head cocked to lean into the touch of his fingertips.

His eyelashes almost flutter close.

It would be /so/ easy now.

Let go. Forget.
And— /God/, Chuuya wants to let go.

He wants to stop comparing himself to others, fighting against things he can’t change.

But then he realizes what he’s doing.

And he feels /stupid/.

He pulls back, cheeks ablaze while Dazai’s eyes leave invisible bruises on his skin.
The alpha’s hand drops, too.

He can still feel Dazai’s skin under his fingertips — his shirt, the light vibration of his crooning.

The /warmth/ of his body.

/Shit./

“Chuuya—“

“Sorry,” the omega mutters, tripping over his words /and/ his maddened heartbeat. “All done now.”
He barely wishes the alpha a good day after that, blushing furiously, and Dazai— /he/ smiles before leaving.

It’s a mellow, almost content smirk before he closes the door behind him.

And Chuuya would like to headbutt the wall and knock himself out of this fucking misery.
Even if he misses Dazai, doesn’t he love himself even a little fucking bit?

Can Dazai hurt him only for Chuuya to be right back in his arms?

The images of the fight flicker behind his lids as butterflies explode in his stomach.

He is /so/ hurt.

Yet he can’t stay away.

The moment he steps out of the house, Dazai’s entire world crushes on him.

Chuuya’s scent fills him still, leaving him /full/ and terribly empty at the same time.

It hurts, Dazai realizes, to know that you are not enough to make somebody stay.

That you don’t have the
power to make that person you love more than anything else in the world change their mind. That you have no choice but to /wait/.

He never prayed, Dazai, but he’s learning to.

He swallows, trying to slow down the tangled mess of his thoughts and feelings.

He /has/ a way out.
Out of this situation with Chuuya, out of university, out of any connection with the mafia.
There’s always a door left ajar in the corner of his mind — it’s there to be taken, if he dares.

He mulls it over like he’s thought it over a thousand times.

He toys with the idea.
He wishes he could find the courage to crush the idea away or finally act on it.

(‘Do you only feel like that with your rut?’

‘No. It’s always lurking.’)

But Chuuya’s scent calms him. It grounds him.

So Dazai steps away from the idea and breathes with his full lungs.

When he comes home, Chuuya finds the door unlocked.

Which is /not/ normal.

It’s early afternoon on a weekend, therefore not a time he is usually home.
Dazai just sent him a picture of Ranpo from the library too, so—

A rustle from the kitchen turns Chuuya’s blood into ice.
He leaves his shoes and backpack in the genkan, holding his breath and damming the muffled howling of his stomach.

He hates it. For some reason, his belly always decides to be loud when he’s anxious — and when there’s utter silence.

And if he dies, what will the headlines be?
‘Handsome redhead with a brilliant future found by killers because his stomach growled’?

/It’d be so—/

Suddenly, the noises from the kitchen stop. Chuuya halts too, fight-or-flight instinct kicking in.

/—embarrassing./

A pause.

Then, noise again. Steps. Someone humming.
Biting his lips, Chuuya moves cautiously across the room. He heads for the kitchen, although he tells himself he is an absolute /idiot/ for it.

/Is it the mafia?/

Because— there is obviously someone rummaging in the drawers.

They’re not even trying to be silent.

/A burglar?/
Oh lord, Chuuya thinks, heart beating in his throat.

/It must be Mishima.

He’s back with a vendetta like a Bond Villain./

And Chuuya wishes he could use anything as a weapon, but he only has a bunch of unsold cookies and his useless phone.

So— yeah, it’s kinda game over.
Mishima in full Kill Bill gear (or the Port Mafia, he still has to decide which option he likes less) 1, Nakahara Chuuya 0.

And the thing is: he’s too fucking nice to be murdered like this. But what can he do, throw stale cookies at a trained assassin?

He saw those yakuza
in the movies, they’re /scary/.
Dazai is quite damn scary, at times, and he didn’t even grow in the Port Mafia!

He’ll die helpless, young and single.

Holding in a shaky breath, the omega peeks into the kitchen.

Oh, he’s /so/ going to die—

“…You’re back soon, Chuuya-kun.”
The omega almost jumps out of his skin.

There’s a /man/ in his kitchen.

A tall silhouette standing in backlight — broad shoulders, short hair and a known voice.

And a familiar scent.

/Dazai’s/ scent.

“What the /fuck/!?” Chuuya bellows, choked-up and taking a step back.
Oda blinks at him, adjusting his sleeves; he rolled them up to his elbows ever so casually as if he /owns/ the kitchen.

“…Are you alright?”

So. Hm.

This is embarrassing but—

Well. It seems that Chuuya may /not/ be going to be murdered by the Port Mafia today, after all.
“No!? You have—“ The omega stutters and stops mid-way, placing a hand on his heart. “/Shit/.”

He sucks in a mouthful of air, greedily, /fully/.

He’ll survive, which is cool.

But the door was unlocked, which means Oda has a set of keys. Great.

After a second, Chuuya decides
that’s something to discuss with Dazai. It’s not Oda’s fault if the /idiot/ never mentioned it.

Even if he can understand why Oda has spare keys, Dazai should have told him anyway.

“You /scared/ me!”

Odasaku smiles — the perfect balance between apologetic and /amused/.
It manages to pass as polite, but the redhead isn’t sure he’s comfortable with Oda looking at him like he’s /funny/. Or cute.

“I’m sorry.”

“I didn’t know you could just let yourself in,” Chuuya clarifies, still a little short of breath.

Immediately, Oda’s smile drops.
“Oh,” he says, realization passing through his face. It’s just a flash, though. “Of course. I apologize, Mori gave me the keys a long time ago.”

Chuuya tugs his hands into his jeans’ backpockets — defensively. He’s an afterthought /again/.

“Yeah, and Dazai forgot to mention.”
“I’ll talk to him, if you want.”

Chuuya shakes his head.

“I can do that. And I promise you I will roast the /idiot/ but— please, keep those keys.”

Chuuya stares at his feet, not allowing himself to say that they might come in handy, one day.
That Dazai might need—

/Help./
Because he will /try/ to be there for Dazai, but what if he’ll be at work one day when the alpha is feeling /badly/?

No. /No./

He won’t risk Dazai’s life because of jealousy.

With a serious expression on his face, blue eyes as dark as a storm-tossed sea, Oda nods.
Just like he nodded the night of the fight, understanding exactly what Chuuya means.

Cautious, Chuuya pushes into the kitchen.

“What are you doing, anyway?”

“I was bringing Dazai some food.” The omega pauses, eyes scanning Chuuya’s face. He squints. “You do like curry, right?”
/I was bringing Dazai some food./

Chuuya runs a hand through his hair, pondering over an answer. Insecurity crawls down his spine at the implications of that question.

This man is free to take care of Dazai, but… but /he/ doesn’t want to /owe/ anything to Oda.
He doesn’t want to be adopted by him just because he’s around while another omega mends Dazai’s heart.

“I… yeah, I like curry.”

“Good,” Oda says — he also lets out a ‘hmm’ from the back of his throat, almost appreciative.

“But I /really/ don’t need you to be polite with me.”
Blue eyes stare at him, leaving invisible brands under Chuuya’s skin.

Dazai’s Odasaku, he realizes, is like the ocean.

Tranquil on the surface, but intense.

“Chuuya-kun,” he starts, with a small sigh. “We started off on the wrong foot, but I hope I’ll get to know you.”
“Why?”

“Because you took the edges off him,” the man says. “Because he sees a future with you, as he let us know over and over again.”

Chuuya worries at his bottom lip, uneasy.

“A future,” he echoes.

Oda’s head bobs up and down — he lets the word sink in, politely.
“You know Osamu. Future wasn’t a word he foresaw before /you/.”

No, it /surely/ wasn’t.
But now—

“He’s still so /lost/,” Chuuya says, instead.

“Sometimes. But he’s doing better with you and— Ango and I, we /both/ are grateful for that.”

“Well. I care about Dazai,” he hums.
How strange; his heart is drumming in his chest as hard as it did when he thought he was going to die. “I think that much is clear.”

Oda offers him a smile, though it explodes into a /beam/ in his eyes.

He talks a lot with his eyes, Odasaku.

“And he cares about you.”
Well, so he says.

But Chuuya is still not sure it’s enough — he desperately wants to think things changed, but then Dazai does something that brings them back to the starting point.

So Chuuya decides to not answer at all. He derails the conversation instead, directing it to a
much safer ground.

He sits on a stool, making himself comfortable.

“Dazai never said how you two met.”

A light frown paints itself on Oda’s forehead.
He shrugs, but a hint of nostalgia seeps through the cracks of his silence.

“I was born in Osaka,” he says, eventually.
“The Port Mafia had work there, sumo rings and casino business. My family worked for them — mercenaries, if you will.”

Chuuya’s shoulders stiffens as he finds himself sucked into Oda’s words.

“Your family was in the mafia?” he asks, realizing too late he might sound a little
/too/ interested.

But the man is painting another universe — the /underbelly/ of the world — Chuuya never thought actually existed.

A universe soaked in gunpowder and blood that belongs to thriller and movies.

As he speaks, Oda leans with one hip against the kitchen counter.
It’s a casual gesture, and he looks at Chuuya without really /seeing/ him.

He wonders what is Odasaku facing, right now.

“Yes.” Oda nods. “We were direct subordinates of the executive that takes care of the gambling dens — an unctuous bastard. Stay away if you ever meet him.”
Now, Chuuya has every intention of avoiding the mafia in general — and thank you very much — but he still bows curtly at the information.

“I hope I’ll never have the pleasure.”

“I hope so,” Oda says. “But living under that shadow was the only reality I knew.”

“That’s shitty.”
Oda closes in his shoulders, shaking his head.

“It was. That's when my family was called to Yokohama— then, the mad boss hang himself with his wife. The son found them."

An icy grip clutches Chuuya’s stomach.

"Dazai's parents."

Oda’s jaw locks shut for a long moment.
"The old boss was a ticking bomb. I can promise you, I remember how our people celebrated when he died."

Oh.
Oda is fidgeting, Chuuya realizes; staring at his hands, playing with his fingers.

He’s not as tranquil as he wants to appear, and he feels mildly guilty for prying.
"No one cried over him, certainly not the executives. My only regret is that Dazai ultimately paid the price for it."

/I don’t know my family, therefore I don’t know myself/.

Chuuya’s heart stutters.

“I’m sorry,” he says.

He doesn’t /pity/ Oda. He respects him, if anything.
But part of the omega — the idealistic, spoiled part that grew up in a loving family — still wishes he could do… something. Anything.

Even if he can’t.

Even if it’s too late and the tiniest, most encouraging smile is crossing Oda’s lips.

“Don’t be. Long story short, that’s
how I crossed paths with Dazai. And I became his only friend.”

“His lifeline,” Chuuya murmurs.

His one.

His bonded companion.

“We saved each other,” Oda says; so much /tenderness/ rests in his voice. “Without him, I would be like my parents — murdering people for a living.”
Chuuya scurnches his nose. “Wh— You can’t just say that!”

Oda shoots him a confused glance.

“Why? It’s true.”

“But— don’t sound so /unfazed/!”

Oda shrugs. “You seem way too concerned, Chuuya-kun.”

“Hah!? I’m sorry, local O’Ren Ishii, I didn’t think this shit /happened/.”
Oda grins. “You’d be surprised.”

Well— Can anything surprise him after a mafia heir ex-boyfriend?

Chuuya wrinkles his forehead at the perspective. The bar for the word got seriously, /seriously/ way too high.

“No, thanks. I’ve had enough surprises for a damn lifetime.”
Oda throws his head back as he explodes in laughters — heartily, fully.

“Understandable,” he says. “But Dazai tells me /your/ parents own a shinto shrine?”

Oh /no/.

Chuuya rolls his eyes to the ceiling so /strongly/ he’s sure he’ll get an headache from it.
“Can the Mackerel shut up?”

“He was very excited about ghosts, apparently.”

“/Of course/ he was.”

“And he said something about a god of chaos…?”

Chuuya clicks his tongue.

Still, he happily launches himself in an explanation about Arahabaki and why it’s absolute /bullshit/.
Not because Chuuya likes Oda, or trusts him all of a sudden, but because every person should know Arahabaki is stupid.

Oda takes his leave an hour and a half of talking and a cup of tea later.

Only then Chuuya realizes that he… talked to the omega. Civilly.

Like a /person/.
It wasn’t so bad.
Aside from the fact that Chuuya thought he would become past tense because of the Port Mafia.

Ignoring that he /did/ end up accepting the extra curry Oda left for him.

Forgetting about Dazai’s bond—

It /wasn’t/ bad.

He isn’t that bad, Dazai’s Odasaku.
He and Chuuya aren't friends, and maybe they'll never be, but they aren't total strangers anymore. He isn’t a rival to slay.

He can /see/ how they care for Dazai — deeply, but differently.

And Chuuya feels a little more /sure/ of his place than he did yesterday.

The weird thing with break-ups is that they feel like explosions.

They trigger a change. It’s sudden, and /loud/, and it shifts the world from its axis, and then— nothing.

The world is exactly how it was yesterday.

It didn’t /stop/ its rotation, it didn’t explode.
You’re alive.

Battered and bruised, but alive.

And the only thing that lingers is the loud silence after the screams.

Absolute /normality/.

(Whatever that word meant yesterday, its meaning is lost today.)

A weird peace while your heart learns to beat on its own again.
One moment you belong with someone, and suddenly you’re alone.

That weird moment in time between a crisis and its resolution, when everything seems normal but /nothing/ is like it used to be.

And everything is the same, yet different.

Take Dazai, for example.
Chuuya sees him every day, and the alpha lives his life like he always did.

University, complaining about Ranpo, ignoring Mori’s calls; rinse and repeat.

His eyes softened when he noticed the curry, and Chuuya pretended he didn’t notice.

/He pretended it didn’t sting./
But Dazai also changed.

Subtle, tiny changes that Chuuya forces himself to ignore daily, but that speak louder than a hundred fights.

How Dazai rarely smiles with his eyes.

How he lowers his gaze from time to time, spacing out.

How he looks out of the window for minutes on
end, face blank, eyes lightless.

The moments spent staring at the running water, lost in thoughts.

The ‘I’m sorry, Chuuya, you are absolutely right’ Dazai uttered out when the omega confronted him about Oda having a pair of keys.

No bullshit, no jokes, /nothing/.
And Chuuya thought he would prefer it — he just asked for an apology, a sincere one — but… but it didn’t feel like /Dazai/ at all.

He appreciated the seriousness and the regret, but couldn’t /find/ the alpha he used to know in it.

It seemed— dead.

It weirded Chuuya out.
Because he /sees/ it.

The alpha always had that dark, cold shadow shrouding his personality — a patina of sadness that Chuuya could never dissipate, no matter how hard he tried to love Dazai — but it became /thicker/ after the break up.

Still, the big change is invisible.
The big change is that now, he’s on his own. They both are

And Chuuya—

Chuuya fights his way back into a routine that used to make him happy.

Work. Return home.
Hop on a train, go to Atsushi and Ryuu’s place, have dinner together like they used to.

It’s odd to do this alone.
The omega never invites Dazai; he doesn’t even /try/ since Ryuunosuke would gladly turn him into an obituary.

No matter how badly things ended, Chuuya is not sure he’s ready to lose his ex to poison /or/ his best friend to jail.

And he swears he doesn’t /miss/ Dazai, he doesn’t
miss having the alpha by his side as they all laugh about a customer service nightmare story Ryuu is telling. He swears he’s fine.

He’s lying.

That’s Chuuya’s big little change: a life that seemed tailored for him now doesn’t fit. He outgrew that life.

It’s not /his/ anymore.
But he’s trying to make it work anyway, so he counts his blessings for the things that /didn’t/ change.

Atsushi.

Ryuu.

Their little ball of fur from hell that started running in circles around Chuuya the moment he stepped into the house.

He /loves/ Chuuya, Atsushi swears.
Ryuu used to jest that he and Dazai traumatized Diablo the day they /almost/ got too handsy in their spare bedroom, but that joke vanished with Dazai.

Now, at dinner, they talk about—

“So I told her, ‘if you want a Frappuccino go to a /goddamn/ Starbucks’,” Ryuunosuke says.
“He really said that.” Chuuya looks at Atsushi as he says it, flashing him a smirk from across the table. “The poor girl looked terrified.”

“I don’t blame her,” Atsushi adds. He’s listening with eyes wide and the phantom of a smirk on his face.

From his seat next to him,
Ryuunosuke deadpans.
He tenderly rested his hand on Atsushi’s thigh at the beginning of the dinner and never moved it. It’s not possessive, but is /intimate/.

Chuuya is still trying /very/ hard to ignore it.

(It /did/ remind him of Dazai.

Well—

Of his /absence/.)
“She should think before asking dumb questions to people who have been up since five in the morning.”

Chuuya rolls his eyes to the ceiling. “Ryuu. She was ten.”

Atsushi gapes. “Ten? /Ryuu/!”

The boy raises a hand, turning defensive the moment Atsushi talks.

“I was /tired/!”
Chuuya raises his glass, filled to the brim with red wine, gesturing with it in Akutagawa’s direction.

“Listen to the smart half of the couple, Ryuu.”

“Shut up, shorty.”

“/Never/.”

Chuuya declares it with his full chest, downing his glass and reaching for the bottle again.
He /is/ drinking a lot, but he’s trying to ignore the empty chair.

There’s him, alone.

Then Ryuu and Atsushi sitting side by side, with their bunny getting the zoomies on the carpet.

And Dazai’s ghost.

The omega can /sense/ how the smile fades from his face.

“/Chuuya/?”
Atsushi’s voice sounds /gentle/, but Chuuya already has a hunch he won’t like the question.

Atsushi is way too empathetic to not notice how, in between conversations, his gaze keeps wandering to the empty chair.

“Yeah?”

“How are… How are you doing? How is living with Dazai?”
The omega shrugs.

See? That’s another little change in his new almost-like-before reality: the questions.

“He’s fine,” Chuuya says, trying to ignore the hundreds of things he’s hiding away with an ever-so-vague ‘fine’.

He says Dazai is fine because he /definitely/ isn’t.
“Are you two ignoring each other at home?” Atsushi asks, tilting his head to the side.

At that, the redhead would like to /cry/ and laugh at the same time.

If only there was a fucking way to ignore Dazai.

If he only /could/ ignore the alpha. If he could shut his brain.
“Not at all. We are getting along quite civilly, actually. Dazai has exams soon so he’s mostly in the library.”

“Is he moving to the library anytime soon?” Ryuunosuke pipes in, between two sips of wine. “I mean, permanently?”

Chuuya chuckles — it comes out /dry/, almost bitter.
Atsushi playfully slaps his boyfriend’s forearm. Ryuu tells him something Chuuya doesn’t quite get, and the two look so /in sync/.

So… perfectly balanced.

It aims a jab right at Chuuya’s stomach — and a little above, to his heart.

“Yeah, no. /Sadly/ I do see him every day.”
“And are you…?”

“Ok with it?” Chuuya growls, interrupting Atsushi mid-sentence. “Affected? Sad all the fucking time? No. Yes. I don’t know.”

But after all, what does any of them know?

What does Chuuya know about love at all?

Isn’t he just a heart barely stitched together?
A broken body that discovered for the first time he isn’t unlovable, that he didn’t deserve all the abandonment and deception?

Isn’t he just an empty bottle after a love story that ended too soon? A phase, a mistake?

Is he just a passerby in Dazai’s life, a name in the sand?
And what does Dazai know about love?

The kind that closes its eyes and jumps into the void without a second thought.

The love that trusts. That heals.

That longs, and longs, and longs.

The love that is bright, is kind, that fears saying ‘I love you’ to not spoil its essence.
And what does anybody know about him, about Dazai, about /them/?

About the precious thing they could have been — that they almost were.

What does anybody know about the feeling of floating and finally being found?

Do they know how it feels to be a piece of paper in the wind?
“The thing is—“

Chuuya takes a deep breath, trying to put into words the many facets of how Dazai /feels/.

What Dazai is for him.

“—We are alright. We coexist.”

/And it sucks/, Chuuya’s brain adds. His voice quivers.

(Does Dazai’s voice crack every time he remembers, too?)
The lump in his throat forces Chuuya to suck in another breath, avoiding Atsushi’s gaze.

He /understands/, the redhead realizes.

Ryuu may be too focused on hating Dazai, on keeping count of his many mistakes, but Atsushi—

Atsushi is looking at Chuuya’s pain right in the eye.
It makes him feel oddly vulnerable.

“That’s good to hear,” Atsushi murmurs.

Despite everything, Chuuya finds himself nodding.

It /is/ good that they don’t engage in shouting matches or petty arguments, but also—

How can he explain the misery of this frail almost-normality?
“But every day is also a damn joke,” he says.

Ryuunosuke’s eyes turn into slits — narrow and thunderous and promising a punishment for Dazai.

Chuuya swallows, pushing out a tentative explanation.

Word after word, after word.

(They sound kind of silly, out loud.)
“Even if Dazai is /there/ all the time, I’m— fucking disoriented.

Do you know that situation when your brain is running circles, and then you finally meet the person who’s like: ‘you can rest. I’m here so you won’t be lost anymore’?”

Ryuunosuke casts a side glance to Atsushi.
“I…guess?” he echoes.

Chuuya pretends not to notice the light discomfort in his reply, or how Atsushi digs his elbow in his boyfriend’s ribs.

He probably sounds like an idiot anyway.

“Yes,” Atsushi confirms, though, without diverting his attention from Chuuya and still
not-so-discretely stabbing Ryuunosuke. “I know exactly what you mean.”

Which is probably a lie, technically speaking, because Chuuya is not /sure/ he’s making any sense.

He is still grateful to Atsushi for hearing him anyway, and going beyond his terrible communication skills.
“Yeah—“ Chuuya’s voice trails off for a moment as he tilts his head. “/That/ feeling, that person. To me, Dazai was that.”

Not anymore.
Another invisible change that hurts.

But Dazai will be that again.

Even if he has Odasaku— they /can/ still be /that/ for each other, right?
The redhead lowers his eyes on the half-empty glass, tracing its rim with the tip of his finger just to have something to distract himself with.

Atsushi is still looking at him with a softness that Chuuya is not /sure/ how to read — pitiless, deep understanding.
He wonders if they ever really fought to the point of tearing each other apart, those two.

Well—

he /knows/ they did, though it’s hard to imagine it when all Chuuya heard were vague comments from a Ryuunosuke who refused to show any emotion.

(He’s so /stubborn/.)
Right now, though, Chuuya wonders if Atsushi ever felt Ryuu slip through his fingers.

If he fought and held onto him to make him stay.

If his friends, too, tasted the almost-normality that threatens to suffocate him now.

“I’m sorry,” is all Atsushi says, eventually.
Chuuya silently shrugs the matter away, a little embarrassed, not sure if the omega is apologizing for the situation or for /asking/.

Maybe both.

Or maybe he’s apologizing because Chuuya is a sentimental idiot who just ruined the mood of a perfectly fine dinner.
Ryuunosuke’s dark grey eyes are heavy on him, too, even if the boy refuses to spit any comment out loud.

But—

God. He hates to seem so /devastated/ when he is his own, full self with or without Dazai.

Sobriety is /clearly/ his main problem, right now; he’s not drinking enough.
He doesn’t like how the break-up keeps gnawing at him.

He should be having fun with his friends.

When he’ll return home Dazai will be sleeping anyway, so there is no point in wallowing in self-pity now.

It’s not like Chuuya will have a chance to face the shitty alpha and
their shared, stupidly loud, disastrously complicated feelings.

“But ignore me,” Chuuya growls, stretching his arm. “Let’s just open another bottle. I /obviously/ need more wine.”

Immediately, Ryuunosuke stands up.

“On it.”

“A good one, Ryuu! Don’t be stingy.”
In lieu of an answer, the omega rolls his eyes to the ceiling.

“Yes, /mum/.”

He’ll drink, Chuuya decides, until his brain finally shuts up.

And drink he does.



Dazai puts down the book the moment he hears the keys turning in the lock.

He expected to slip in and out of
sleep on the couch, an old paperback of Chekhov’s Gooseberries on his chest and snuggled under one of the blankets that smell like /Chuuya/.

It would have been a nice night.

But clearly this is /not/ what’s going to happen, because Chuuya will force him to sleep in a /bed/.
He’ll yap his usual nonsense about back pain and the issues of sleeping on the couch (Dazai would gladly stay on the /floor/, for all he cares), and he’ll go on and on and /on/ until Dazai gives in and crawls to his room.

Although—

/Maybe not/.

Maybe not tonight, at least.
Because it takes Dazai /one/ second to realize that Chuuya is drunk. The omega is swaying in place as he takes off his shoes, cussing softly for something Dazai doesn’t quite catch.

A strong scent of wine lingers on his clothes, on his /skin/. Red wine and cigarettes.
“You /smell/.”

Chuuya flinches. His head snaps up.

For what feels like a /lifetime/, he stares at Dazai like a deer caught in headlights, blue eyes trying to focus on the alpha without success.

“Oh,” he slurs, voice ligthly croaky. “You’re still up.”

Dazai tuts.
“It not even midnight,” the alpha says, trying not to sound too /indulgent/, though he’s quite sure Chuuya is too drunk to notice.

As if to confirm his suspects, the redhead wobbles and leans against the living room’s wall.

His fiery red strands scream against the white paint.
“Is it? I didn’t realize.”

“Of course. Chibi’s drunk.”

“Yeah. Thank /God/ I’m drunk,” Chuuya says.

It’s a harsh, honest comment that the omega lets out with his full lungs.

But, then, he glances up. He looks at Dazai again, and there’s a veil of blush covering his freckles
and his eyes shine and— and he looks /so/ vulnerable. So beautiful and feeble and /forthright/. “It’s your fault, by the way.”

/Right/.

Dazai forces out a lopsided grin.

“I wasn’t even there,” he says.

But they are both nursing their broken hearts — and that /is/ his fault.
He understood it.

He /regrets/ it.

He’s just too much of a coward to take responsibility.

“I just—“ Chuuya clicks his tongue. Annoyance takes over his scent for a moment — thicker and darker than wine and smoke. “I needed to stop, y’know?”

/I needed to stop/.
Too uneasy to stay seated, Dazai stands up.

He needs an outlet for this anxiety, a way of feeling /ground/ under his feet.

When he tries to swallow he finds his throat turned into a desert, his tongue sitting heavily in his mouth.

“You needed to stop doing what?”
As Chuuya steps closer, slowly padding across the living room using the wall as support, Dazai thinks that he /needs/ to know.

“/You/.”

If it’s definitely over, he needs—

Dazai frowns. “What?”

—to make peace with himself.

“You. I needed to stop thinking about you.”
“…Why?” he wheezes out.

It seems the safest option, whilst a hundred other questions remain stuck in his throat.

Chuuya stares, and Dazai’s ears keep /ringing/.

Then, the omega steps forward. He almost trips over the coffee table, and loudly cusses against it.
He still shoots a murderous glance to Dazai the moment the alpha hurls forward to catch him.

“I’m /fine/,” he snaps. He doesn’t shrug Dazai’s touch away, though — the alpha’s hand lightly covering his arm, sustaining him. Helping him. “I can walk perfectly on my own.”
/And Chuuya is not Dazai’s to help or protect anymore./

The alpha snickers, strangled.

“/Sure/. You’re a true lightweight.”

/He’s not his to cradle and cuddle after a hangover/.

“Fuck you. I’m not.”

Mechanically, Chuuya shifts closer — in search for warmth, /contact/.
“Are too,” Dazai murmurs, playfully, ever so /tender/.

// But Chuuya is not his to kiss, right now.

No matter how much Dazai needs to.//

“It’s so fucking unfair,” Chuuya whines, a scowl darkening his blue eyes. “Even like this, I can’t—“

He never finishes the sentence.
The omega seems to think against it and moves closer, following a mental process Dazai can’t grasp.

Sheer instinct. Need.

They stand chest against chest, Chuuya completely leaning into Dazai’s space.

His scent envelops the alpha — wine and cigarettes and apples and /blood/.
No trace of Dazai lingers in Chuuya’s scent anymore.

And he knows he should step back, leave Chuuya space, let him sleep off the wine, but—

But then Chuuya tugs him down and kisses him with the blind, reckless faith that only belongs to drunkards and martyrs, and Dazai /thaws/.
Because Chuuya’s mouth is covering his. He’s clenching Dazai’s sweater with one hand and cupping his jaw with the other — a kiss so gentle.

It tastes like wine and stars and /home/.

He parts his lips, arms closing around Chuuya’s shoulders.

Framing them as the omega shivers,
as Dazai presses him closer against his body.

Chuuya moves under him, chest vibrating in a low purr. His fingers thread up through dark curls, now, combing them.

He kisses Dazai almost to savor him — slow and deep and /intense/.

When Dazai presses a peck on Chuuya’s lips and
moves away just enough to talk, he’s rewarded with a moan.

“‘Samu—“

“Are you /really/ sure?”

Chuuya licks his lips, and Dazai finds himself staring.

“I’m not that drunk,” he says. “Just shut me up before I can embarrass myself saying how /seriously/ I still love you.”
Dazai doesn’t need any encouragement after that.

Not after /that/ sentence.

Because even though Chuuya knows him now, his past and his family and his /rotten/ sides—

He stayed.

And the realization blooms in his chest, exploding in a hundred butterflies: he’s whole again.
He’s saved.

/Again./

Just like that morning.

Only, now, Chuuuya is showing that same unexpected kindness to another Dazai.

Another, deeply wounded side of him.

One that lurked in the shadows.

// He’s showing kindness to the kid that Tsushima Shuuji could never be. //
And Dazai didn’t realize how /close/ he was to the edge of complete self-destruction until now.

For a second, his lungs refuse to work.

His heart backflips, and he’s not sure if his head is light because of the emotions or because he hasn’t eaten in more than a day, but—
But he just can’t /function/, stunned and amazed and chocked-up.

And maybe it won’t matter tomorrow morning.

Maybe Chuuya is just drunk, maybe it’s nothing but a goodbye kiss, but—

But it saved Dazai all the same.

He hiccups, realizing he can’t /move/. He wants to, though.
He wants to taste Chuuya and hold him and say that he is /sorry/, but his body is heavy.

He leans his forehead against Chuuya’s, inhaling, wishing his heart would stop throbbing so he can focus back on kissing the omega.

He’s moving through molasses, overwhelmed.

Absolutely,
completely frozen. It’s— odd.

He feels feverish.

He never faced his emotions before, and /now/ they decided it’s mutiny time?

“Samu?”

Chuuya pulls back, a little alarmed.

His fingers trip over the curve of Dazai’s cheek — finding damp, boiling skin.

“Are you /crying/?”
Dazai doesn’t reply.

He stares back at Chuuya with wide, lost eyes and glimmering streams of tears falling down his cheeks.

He parts his lips — even just to /downplay/ the emotions roiling in him now — but nothing comes out.

Nothing but a strangled sound, halfway between
an “oh” and a wail.

His bottom lip wobbles, and Dazai realizes he never felt so damn /helpless/ in his life.

All his usual masks seem to have shifted out of his grasp. A chaotic storm of his bare, confused emotions is all that remains; everything he can /count on/.
Immediately Chuuya’s hands sink in his hair, rubbing soothing patterns on his scalp.

The alpha bends a little to let the shorter omega reach him comfortably, a soft sob escaping him as Chuuya peppers his wet cheekbones with featherlight kisses.
“Baby, it’s alright,” Chuuya hums against his skin, a purr vibrating in his voice. “Just breathe for me, ok?”

The encouragement makes Dazai want to cry harder — and he /would/ turn the subdued sobs into ugly crying, if he only could.

If only anybody had ever taught him /how/.
Honestly? It’s not alright. He can’t fucking breathe and /nothing/ is ok.

Nothing is in damn /order/.

Even worse— tears are falling, but Dazai can’t figure out /why/.
He’s overjoyed, and crying doesn’t seem like the ideal response.

He doesn’t do /crying/ anyway, not in
front of Chuuya.
And he feels feverish, light, heavy, broken down and untethered at the same time.

/Safely/ untethered, now that the other half of his soul is back in his arms.

Yet his eyes won’t /stop/ tingling.

“I—“ Dazai mouths, trying to speak around the hiccups. His
throat burns, set ablaze by the sobs he can’t keep down nor let out. “I—“

/Why/?

Words were never his enemy before.

“Hey,” Chuuya calls, hands slipping down Dazai’s neck. A moment later, gentle fingers are framing his face. “Look at me; I’m here. I’m not going anywhere.”
“But—“

Dazai’s voice dies off, trembling, and Chuuya kisses the corner of his mouth.

As he squeezes his eyes shut in the hope to regain a minimum of control over himself, shadows dance behind his closed lids.

He senses wine on Chuuya’s lips. Warmth. The ghost of a purr.
And boiling tears run down his cheeks, still, each caught by Chuuya’s cold thumbs.

Dazai hunches a little on himself, shoulders trembling.
How stupid he must appear—

“‘Samu,” Chuuya calls again, thumb skimming across the alpha’s cheek.

/So tender./

“Look at me, please?”
And Dazai has never been on the receiving end of a command — omegas aren’t even able to /command/ people — but his entire body resonates with Chuuya’s voice.

Because it’s not his second gender that reacts to those words, to that firm but gentle invitation.

It’s his /heart/.
He can’t look at Chuuya in the eye without a wave of shame and regret and unguarded affection roaring in his body, making it glitch.

Still, Dazai lifts his head.

What he sees is—

/Blue/.

The ocean blue of Chuuya’s eyes scanning his face. The subtle smile of his lips.
And something in Dazai /clicks/ in response, too.

Because Chuuya’s hands are shaky and because he seems on the verge of tears, too. Because he’s so beautiful with his gaze tarnished by a few drinks.

And Dazai is /aware/ that he risked the only good thing he ever knew when he
let Chuuya walk out that door with a heavy heart and a head full of doubts, but—

Chuuya is here /now/.

When the alpha finally manages to speak, it’s barely a mumble.

“I’m fine, I think,” he says.

Chuuya smiles.

“/Good/. Deep breaths.”

“It’s— I missed you.”

So, so much.
It’s half a truth, because ‘miss’ doesn’t begin to cover whatever the hell Dazai has been feeling in the past weeks, but it’s /something/.

Chuuya nods, searching for the alpha’s eyes for a long moment — ‘I know. I’ve known all along,’ — before pulling him into another kiss.
It tastes like tears, this time.

Melting into the contact, Dazai allows himself to calm down a little.

He releases his emotions, and discovers that—

How /unexpected/.

He’s not a slave of his feelings. Actually, they roll right off like storm water if he doesn’t fight them.
Silently, Dazai follows Chuuya’s purring as the omega trails kisses down his jaw, wiping away the tears with his lips.

He /obeys/ the vibration like gospel, and the sound seems to be mending his ruined soul.

It’s Chuuya who guides them to his nest, never breaking the kiss.
Their fingers stumble over clothes, never daring too much. Dazai sighs against Chuuya’s lips when the omega reaches for his hand, pulling at the bandages covering his wrist.

He starts to unroll them, and Dazai /lets/ him.

They never, /ever/ break the kiss.
Chuuya’s hands wander on Dazai’s body, mapping it as if the omega /knows/ that letting him go might cause Dazai to break down again.

And Dazai devours him with every kiss, with every caress.

Chuuya’s t-shirt lies abandoned in the living room, tossed over the couch’s armrests.
Dazai’s hoodie falls to the floor in the corridor.

His sweatpants, too.

The alpha chuckles, still chocked-up, as Chuuya almost falls while slipping out of his pants.

They are both out of breath when Chuuya pushes him on the bed and straddles him— skin on skin, mouth on mouth.
“Chibi—“ Dazai calls.

He’s asking for /permission/

Chuuya grins at him from above.

“Yes,” he says, bending over the brunet — lips brushing over his flickering eyelashes and the dry patterns of tears. Dazai croons at that, hands resting on the omega’s hips. “I missed you too.”
Still with a phantom smile on his lips, Chuuya lets Dazai pull him in for a deeper, slower kiss.

He angles his head, nibbling at Chuuya’s bottom lip as the omega cups his face.

His spine arches the moment he feels Chuuya grind against his crotch, hips rocking ever so subtly.
There’s an alluring shyness in the way Chuuya moves. Dazai inhales, taken aback and /mesmerized/.

And maybe the alcohol turned off Chuuya’s mental switch and all his insecurities for now, but— but he’s so /naturally/ sultry.
The way his hips roll. The way his eyes shine, gauging Dazai’s reaction.

The way he’s in control without even knowing it.

The way he’s holding Dazai’s heart in his hands, and he /knows/ it.

If the wine is making Chuuya more at ease, Dazai mulls, they need to drink more often.
And he’s sure the omega will move away soon, but for now he just enjoys the friction — turning harder under the delicious weight of Chuuya moving on him.

Just like that, the last waves of shame and guilt evaporate with the souring scent of arousal that fills the room.
The sweet scent of slick mixes with wine on Chuuya’s tongue — blending in with the tempting notes of /want/.

It’s more adult, though, less greedy.

Dazai suffocates the need to sink his teeth in the tender column of Chuuya’s neck, trying to control the need to tell the world
they are /one/.

That they are back to being partners in crime, friends, lovers. Soulmates.

But they don’t need a mark yet. They’ll get there, eventually.

For now, Dazai promises himself he will worship Chuuya.

He will make Chibi forgive him, he thinks.

He’ll make it right.
Every little spot the omega likes, every secret corner in that perfect body of his that Dazai /knows/ will make Chuuya quiver and moan and melt — Dazai will cover them all with attentions, laving them in kisses and caresses.

Because he still can’t believe this is real.
Tears push at the corners of his eyes again the moment Dazai allows himself to remember that he’s not drunk — he’s not dreaming.

CW // NSFW

He beats the feeling back, swearing he /won’t/ cry again.

Instead, he will make Chuuya cum to his fingers and tongue in whatever way
the omega will ask.

He’ll make him cum until Chuuya /begs/, until Dazai’s back will be covered in red scratches and Chuuya’s eyes will be glossy with tears and they’ll be both panting and lost — until the omega forgets his own name.

Until Chuuya forgets everything but /them/.
Dazai’s hands slide down the redhead’s body, feeling warm skin under his fingertips.

He seeks friction by arching his spine — rubbing his hardened dick, still constricted in the underwear, against the omega’s ass.

Chuuya’s eyelashes flutter closed.

He tilts his chin up to
inhale — long auburn hair softly caught between his neck and freckled shoulders, spilling like liquid flames on the omega’s sharp collarbone.

Dazai never saw Chuuya so /free/. So confident.

He’s always been handsome, but self-consciousness was part of that beauty.

Now—
Now Chuuya wears his own lust like a tailored dress, ravenous but unapologetic.

Mesmerized by the vision and incapable to tear his gaze away, Dazai grinds a little more /obviously/ against his lover’s ass.

He’s shamefully hard against Chuuya’s soft buttocks, pre-cum staining
his underwear and mixing with the slick dripping from the omega’s tight boxer briefs.

And just the shape of Chuuya’s hard dick makes Dazai’s mouth /water/, but he forces himself to wait.

The omega’s nails scrape Dazai’s chest in response, his bottom lip /crimson/ and caught
in his teeth, and—

/God/.

Dazai could look at him forever.

He always goads Chuuya by calling him /short/, but he would gladly spend his life looking at him from below.

And it’s /nice/ to have Chuuya pinning him down like this, even if Dazai knows it won’t last.
It never does.

The omega always ends up feeling a little too exposed.

He’s usually /so/ careful about the signals his body gives, Chuuya.

He’s careful to never promising too much; as if he’s carrying the weight of a thousand unsaid, unmeant promises on his shoulders.
He acts as if any possible mixed signal will be his fault, and his responsibility.

Because Chuuya is /alone/, in his head, carrying the burden of mistakes that should be shared with a partner.

Dazai tried to tell the omega that he’s not expecting /anything/, ever.
He sure as well won’t demand anything that Chuuya won’t give, because he doesn’t /want/ any of that.

He wants Chuuya happy.

He wants him /comfortable/.

Yet, the carefulness is /engrained/ in the omega. It shows during sex especially, but colors every aspect of his life.
That guarded attitude has been seared in Chuuya’s nature by all the past ‘I thought you meant…’, ‘it’s your fault’.

/You seemed willing/.

/You don’t love me enough if we won’t have sex/.

/You said yes to something, and now I expect everything’/.
Years of gaslighting and manipulation and /expectations/ shaped him.

Tonight, though—

Tonight, the wine seems to cover the droplet of blood that makes the omega’s scent just a tiny bit iron-y.

Tonight Chuuya is drunk and emotional and hungry and /careless/.
He’s moving on Dazai’s dick deliberately /slowly/, teasing him, coaxing a symphony of sighs and moans out of the alpha.

Dazai loves the teasing.

He /hates/ it.

He needs more of it.

However, the omega playfully /slaps/ his knuckles the moment Dazai dares to reach for
Chuuya’s underwear.

Dazai instantly /obeys/. He drops his hand, grasping the sheets under him instead.

“Not /yet/,” Chuuya purrs, slurring his words a little. “I like this.”

Another soft command.

Another instance when Chuuya proves him that no matter the second-gender,
despite the power imbalance and the ‘strong gender’ bullshit the world likes so much, Dazai will follow that gorgeous purr anywhere.

/Always/.

He can only /listen/ — a slave of how Chuuya’s bare thighs embrace his hips, of the hands palming his chest unhurriedly.
In turn, the alpha’s elegant hands slide down the redhead’s body, warm under the pads of his fingers.

Chuuya bends over him, lips curled upwards.

His mouth ghosts over Dazai’s neck, his grinding and teasing /vivid/ despite the cage of the underwear they are both still wearing.
Such a tiny cage, tempting Dazai so.

He breathes the sugary scent of his slick, he sees and feels Chuuya’s hard cock through the fabric.

The /promise of it/ is enough to send a rush of impatience down the alpha’s spine.

He grips Chuuya’s body harder just before letting go.
Chuuya understands immediately, flashing Dazai a playful grin as he pulls away to /finally/ strip down completely.

Dazai does the same.

He is enjoying that unspoken communication — that silky red thread the alpha risked to snap, but that he still notices in the little things.
In moments like this one, in the omega’s nest, with Chuuya straddling him and an intoxicating scent filling the room, it’s hard to remember that things changed — even for a little, even if the storm has passed.

It’s difficult, painful, to recognize that he almost lost Chuuya.
But it swells Dazai’s heart to realize that he didn’t destroy that connection — it’s /safe/.

The knowledge that Chuuya can still smile and be naked in front of him, that he can be /intimate/ with him, makes Dazai quiver.

It’s not about sexuality, not only.

/ It’s about trust /
It’s with that thought in mind that Dazai drags Chuuya back on his lap and kisses him.

He savors the omega’s lips like he has done on a thousand lazy Sunday mornings — unrushed, deep. Lovingly.

Their bare erections brush together and Dazai lets out a throaty, /hmm/-ing sound.
It’s hard to think with Chuuya like /this/, hard and nestled comfortably on his lap, draped over him and locked in a kiss and dripping slick.

Naked and beautiful and /real/.

Chuuya shifts on the alpha’s lap, his round, naked ass pressing against Dazai’s hardened dick.
His deep blue eyes glimmer with the tiniest hint of surprise as they both realize that Chuuya didn’t wince with the grinding.

He hasn’t moved away yet.

Chuuya opens his mouth, then closes it again. He nibbles at his bottom lip, clearly biting back /words/, and Dazai frowns.
“Chibi…?”

“Do you want to try?” the omega blurts out.

Dazai halts, eyes widening and body naturally reacting to the proposal with a deep, needy roll of hips.
He knows that timbre — half shy, half /sensual/.

Chuuya doesn’t need to articulate his request further — he would
never explain that he wants to /try/ to take Dazai’s knot, way too sheepish to say it out loud.

Dazai hears him anyway.

(That connection, that understanding, is still here.

They are /one/.)

A wrinkle cuts the alpha’s forehead, and he squeezes Chuuya’s arm.

“Are you sure?”
“I—“ Chuuya gnaws at his bottom lip openly this time, searching for Dazai’s face — for his /approval/. “I feel good? I want it. At least I want to /try/.” Chuuya’s eyebrows twitch, almost touching above his nose. “If you are /fine/ with it, of course. If you want me back.”
Dazai mulls over it for a moment.

Chuuya is tipsy enough to not overthink as he normally does, and it’s not even their first try.

They occasionally tried when Chuuya felt well enough, though it always ended with Dazai cradling and cuddling his omega, crooning reassuring words.
/It’s ok if it didn’t work./

It’s ok if Chuuya could only take a few thrusts before the pain stabbed him. He won’t be loved less.

And Dazai loves him /so/ fucking much.

Still, Chuuya always appears crushed after.

He curls on himself and says ‘sorry’, and Dazai’s heart breaks.
But now, if the wine is numbing the pain and Chuuya feels comfortable enough to /try/ again—

“Of course, sugar,” Dazai says, searching for the omega’s hand and holding it. “If you’re sure.”

/It’s worth a shot, like *always*./

Chuuya gives a small nod. “Yeah— I think it’s ok.”
Wearing only an encouraging smile, Dazai side-eyes the nightstand.

“The lube is still in the drawer. Can you please…?”

Chuuya obeys, no further instructions needed.

Despite it being Chuuya’s nest, Dazai always took care of the lube, placing it somewhere the redhead could
forget that he is an /omega/ and still needs lube to even get a finger in.

Yet now Chuuya seems /eager/.

He stretches over Dazai and reaches for the nightstand, leaving the drawer open after he fishes for a small tube of slick-based lube.
They bought it to /experiment/, but never had the occasion to use much of it.

And Chuuya slick is delicious to lap off the omega’s plump ass and smooth thighs, but Dazai agrees that it’s never enough.

It’s certainly not enough /now/, even if Chuuya’s mind is not gripped by
anxiety as it usually is.

“Thanks, baby,” Dazai says.

He drops the pet name /bravely/ and as casually as he can, accepting the plop of lubricant Chuuya squeezes on the alpha’s outstretched fingers.

The faintest trace of redness spreads over Chuuya’s cheeks as he tosses the
bottle on the mattress and out of the way.

“It’s fine,” Chuuya murmurs, like the /perfect/ little tsundere he is, though it’s /clear/ he’s basking in the pet name.

Dazai grins. /So cute/. And it’s /easy/ to get back into a rhythm, but—

“Just, /please/, stop me if it hurts.”
Chuuya smiles, kissing the top of Dazai’s nose and settling with both elbows on the alpha’s chest.

“I always do,” he says.

Even though /that/ is true and Chuuya communicates his needs openly (ah, Dazai should take notes, shouldn’t he?) the alpha’s heart is drumming in his chest
The friction of Chuuya’s cock against his makes Dazai /hiss/ ever so subtly.

He never pressured Chuuya, but now that they are so close— he wants it. He wants to knot his omega, he wants to make him his.

He wants more.

He wants /all/.

But has he the right to ask for anything,
to take anything Chuuya is offering? Can he, after everything he held back?

Somehow, it doesn’t feel right.

It feels /selfish/.

Trying to brush away the doubts, Dazai focuses on rubbing his fingers together to warm up the lube. His nostrils flare with the fragrance, mostly
chemicals and artificial sweetness. It’s hard to get used to the smell, but he can’t even begin to imagine how /degrading/ it must be for an omega.

Dazai bites his bottom lip, /expecting/ something to go wrong as he runs a wet index finger over the rim of Chuuya’s opening.
He circles it /delicately/, unhurried movements to let the omega the time to get used to the feeling. It’s /important/ to let Chuuya time to say no.

He can /always/ say no. Anytime.

But the omega says nothing, waiting.

The slick is wet against the pad of Dazai’s finger.
Chuuya’s breath ghosts warm over his skin.

And Dazai holds his breath as he dips the tip of his finger in Chuuya’s hole, praying it won’t /hurt/—

Then Chuuya jumps despite the light touch, jerking forward.

Instantly, Dazai halts.
He stops the moment he senses Chuuya letting out the slightest sign of discomfort, fully responsive and alert.

It’s not fucking easy. And he /wants/ Chuuya; he missed him. He dreamed of the omega.
He wants him /so/ much, but not like this.
Not if he doesn’t /like/ it, not if it hurts him.

“Chuuya, are you—”

// Are you /ok/? //

Chuuya breathes out. Deeply, steadily. “It’s just colder than the slick. Go on.”

“We don’t have to, love.”

His eyes meet blue irises — honest, beautiful ones. “But I /want/ to,” he says.
In front of that gentle yet resolute answer, Dazai can only search for Chuuya’s mouth again.

He swallows Chuuya’s fear, kissing him gently, slowly sliding a full finger in the omega’s ass while he’s lost in the contact.

This time, Chuuya doesn’t flinch.
On the contrary, he /relaxes/ around the finger — it’s a /first/, and Dazai smiles against the omega’s lips.

“Relax, Chibi,” he says, “I’ve got you.” 

/He means it/.

God, he /so/ means it.

The anger from the recent separation is wearing off, leaving space to the need.
The nostalgia. The love, which Dazai thought gone.

Dazai presses a kiss on Chuuya’s cheek, and tightens his grip on the omega’s hip while he pushes two careful fingers inside.

When the intrusion is met with a trembling sigh instead of a violent jolt or a cry, Dazai /thaws/.
Dazai smirks against Chuuya’s lips, his dick hard and leaking against his stomach.
It sets off white sparks behind the alpha’s eyelids as it rubs against Chuuya’s cock.

He twists his finger, and Chuuya moans.

Greediness roils in him, that greediness he always tried to kill.
“You’re doing perfectly,” he says, leaning in to nibble on the Chuuya’s bottom lip, all lips and no teeth.

Chuuya remains draped over his chest, shifting to better accomodate Dazai’s fingers. His nails are sunk in the skin, his knees secured at the sides Dazai’s hips.

“‘Samu?”
Hesitant. Quivering.
And Dazai might cum to that sound alone, but he forces himself to /calm down/.

The way he quivers, so impatient and greedy around his fingers, only curls Dazai’s lips into a smile. 

“Yes, baby?”

“Do you think it’s— I was thinking if I can ride you?”
Dazai swallows.

He nods. The words escape him. Chuuya straightens up, sitting on the alpha’s belly. He carefully lifts his ass to let Dazai scissor him open for a few moments before sliding his fingers out.

Chuuya inhales as the tip of Dazai’s dick presses against his hole.
Dazai takes his time, again. Again he feels Chuuya quiver when he carefully slips in.

It’s a /slow/ process, as Dazai stiffens every time Chuuya frowns. But the omega’s natural slick and the lube seem to help — even if
Chuuya has to breathe around the feeling for a few moments, saying he needs a second.

“We have all the time in the world,” Dazai says. He means it.

He’s not /sure/ he would enjoy this, if it were anybody else but Chuuya. He’s not used to being selfless — he’s not good at it.
Being so /careful/ when he’s burning inside is an excruciating exercise in patience.

But Dazai’s heart skips beat when Chuuya sits on his cock to push him deeper, moaning, /sighing/.

His knees press against Dazai’s body, the alpha sprawled on the bed and Chuuya /above/ him.
His hands find Dazai’s, lacing their fingers together, and it feels like they accomplished something /big/.

And Chuuya— he’s a work of art.

His eyelashes flutter on his cheeks, eyes closed and glossy lips parted in bliss.

The Adam apple bobs up and down as he swallows deeply.
The shy rocking of hips — checking if it hurts, deciding it /doesn’t/.

His hair, liquid flame, the color of burning sunsets, glide down his shoulders with the tentative rolls of his hips.

Every time the omega raises a hand to tug a strand away from his face, so /beautifully/
mindless, Dazai’s heart stutters.

And— oh, how he smiles. A free, victorious smile.

How he fucking /moves/.

Every cell in Dazai’s body tunes in with the omega, with his movements, checking for signs of discomfort.

His hips snap upward, and Chuuya’s mouth opens around a moan
He can discern the delighted surprise painted on his lips, shining in his eyes.

/Is this *really* happening?/

It gives Dazai /all/ the answers he need, all the reassurance to pick up the pace.

His thrusts grow faster, less timid, hitting /right/ on the spot that makes the
omega squirm and arch and /moan/.

Chuuya is a vision to behold. Nowhere near breaking, head rolled back exposing a perfect jaw and a tensed neck, bouncing in rhythm with Dazai’s sharp yanks.

“Is it good enough—?” Chuuya hums, glancing down from between long, curled lashes.

God
Chuuya really has /no/ idea of how alluring he is.

“/More/ than enough,” Dazai murmurs, in the most reassuring tone he can muster while also fighting with himself to not cum too soon.

Chuuya addresses him a tiny smile, galvanized by the lack of pain. He jerks forward, moving
his middle and making Dazai sink deep inside him — /letting him in/, not holding back.

With every movement, he gets a little less tense.

And Dazai squeezes the omega’s hands, but also dares to thrust a little faster. Because it’s perfect, it’s /more/ than good;
because it makes him feel alive—

Chuuya has no idea of how rarely Dazai feels alive.

But Dazai knows. Dazai knows, and he treasures moments like this one.

Special moments when Chuuya and him are fused together, mates in everything but the bonding mark.
The welcoming warmth of Chuuya’s body, his tight hole and sweet slick only make everything /more/ intimidate.

So intimate it’s almost daunting.

The alpha digs into the lube-slick hole with a push that coaxes a husky, protracted moan out of Chuuya.
Dazai gnaws at the inside of his cheek as he keeps Chuuya steadily close to him, sinking in the omega with sharp yanks of his pelvis.

He unthreads his fingers from Chuuya’s grip to grab the boy’s middle, guiding his pacing, fingers fondling over the soft curve of his body.
He’s a fast learner, Chuuya. A natural. He responds to every tiny movement of the alpha’s body, ass cheeks clenching around his dick as Dazai slides in and out of the omega.

‘Chuuya’, Dazai chants, over and over, encouraging the omega — hoping it will make him fill at /ease/.
The slapping sound of skin against skin fills his head.

Maybe it’s Chuuya’s scent, so sweet without that tinge of blood to taint it, maybe it’s the overwhelming amount of truth and emotions they shared lately, but Dazai feels dizzy. 

It’s suddenly so, so clear.

/This/ is it.
Chuuya is the only one.

He feels the knot at the base of his dick swelling as Chuuya’s free hands runs over his skin — his chest, his shoulders. It counts his ribs, tracing their shape one by one.

“Chuuya,” Dazai calls, voice cracked.

Half a moan, half a /warning/.
The orgasm has been bubbling in him for a while.

The sheer idea of being with Chuuya again, in any way at all, was enough to make Dazai shake with anticipation, but /feeling/ the omega like this is /not/ helping his self control.

It’s /definitely/ not helping that Chuuya
instinctively knows how to move to make Dazai clench his teeth and lose his mind.

Because Chuuya is touching himself, now, jerking off his own reddened shaft in rhythm with the thrusts — the other hand still wrapped around Dazai’s fingers, holding, clinging to the alpha.
And his voice — so deep, so throaty, a heavy purring rounding the edge of his breaths — is balancing Dazai on the edge of madness, barely keeping him afloat.

So, yes, Dazai wasn’t made to last long. Not tonight.

Not when he still feels stupid with love and lust.
And the sounds escaping Chuuya’s throat, Dazai’s heavy breaths, the squeaks from the mattress under them — they all blend together in a maddening spiral.

Yes, the orgasm was simmering before; it was lurking under the surface.

It kept mounting slowly.

But it’s souring now.
Dazai’s knot feels hard and full. The alpha can sense it growing bigger — stretching Chuuya open so /beautifully/, inch after inch.

In response, Chuuya picks up the pace.

He digs his nails in Dazai’s skin, leaving red trails burning like fire, and inhales and moves /faster/.
Dazai’s stomach clenches as he buries himself deeper into the omega, hips snapping harsher as he chases his high. His /redemption/.

And Chuuya is close too. He’s so close that Dazai can taste it on the roof of his mouth.

It’s crazy. It’s /wonderful/.

It slaps the alpha with
the familiar scent of the orgasm — an explosion of sugary, thick fragrances that fill the air.

Some of Chuuya and some of him, mixed as one.

A scent that lingers in the droplets of sweat on their intertwined bodies, in their scent glands, in the slick running down their legs.
And Dazai can’t believe they are having sex like this, even though he never /needed/ to.

He can’t believe how stretched and warm the omega is for him.

He can’t believe they are /back/, and he has been found again. And this time, he won’t let go.

He won’t hide anymore.
Though it’s easy to make promises and utter oaths and pray to a merciless god when Chuuya is literally /riding/ him. It’s blasphemy, and it’s holy.

But Dazai becomes clay under the omega’s touch.

Chuuya’s entire body is an unspoken command, and Dazai’s souls resonates with it.
Besides… Chuuya’s surprising self-confidence is so alluring, so /god-like/.

Every roll of Chuuya’s hips guides them both on the edge of climax and takes them back again — like waves washing ashore, like a storm rolling in.

It only leaves space for the mad rush of blood
pumping in Dazai’s ears, for the slapping sound of Chuuya’s ass bouncing on his dick.

A grunt escapes Dazai’s lips and his entire body jerks, the judder of wild emotions painting white starts behind his lids.

Of course, Chuuya notices the reaction. Because Chuuya /owns/ him.
He’s back at leaving long, raw scratches down Dazai’s body, as if to mark him. To brand him.

And a voice in the back of his head still advises Dazai to be careful, to be aware of Chuuya’s limits, but /how/ can he?

How, when Chuuya is so /greedy/, asking for more?
So the alpha only thrusts harder and harsher, angling his hips so every hit on Chuuya’s overstimulated prostate can turn the omega into a mess of moans and relaxed limbs.

“You’re doing so good, love,” Dazai croons. The sound comes straight from his ribcage.
He’s there, it’s almost there—

Chuuya’s knees close around Dazai’s waist, completely abandoned.

It’s /just/ right—

“God, Chuuya,” Dazai murmurs, clawing at his lover’s hip. “Chuuya, /my/ Chuuya.”

He’s ready to slide out, but Chuuya’s body stiffens as he stays in place.
The pressure of his clenched buttocks sends a jolt down Dazai’s spine.

And yet Chuuya’s voice is quivering, almost expecting a refusal, as he calls Dazai’s name:

“‘Samu—”

It’s just a word, just an agglomeration of sounds, but it means everything.

It’s /breathy/ and it’s raw.
//Stay inside//, it means.

// Knot me. //

It’s brisk, it’s probably stupid, and it’s irresistible.

In response, Dazai drags Chuuya down into an open-mouthed kiss. The change of angle makes them both hiss, but none of them /stops/.

They’re too close to even think about it.
He should ask if Chuuya is /sure/, but the omega sounds damn sure of what he’s doing.
He seems aware of what he is /requesting/, with or without the wine.

Once again, Dazai /obeys/.

He stays in, mind foggy, lust making him stupid — making him careless.

And he lets go.
He fucking /forgets/, because all he needs is Chuuya, and Chuuya is right here.

The omega releases a shivering breath, and seems to /squirm/ as the knot locks Dazai inside him.

It’s the first time the alpha notices the tiniest sign of discomfort on Chuuya’s handsome face.
It’s too late, though; Dazai spills inside the redhead with a muffled cry, suffocated against the boy’s lips. Chuuya, too, arches his spine and lets out a deep moan, the orgasm crushing over him like a wave.

And—

What did Dazai say before? it’s stupid. It’s crazy. It’s wild.
It’s all that and more, and yet—

And yet it’s somehow tarnished and cut short by the flash of hurt that passed across the omega’s face.

Even worse, Dazai can’t even pull out immediately. His knot only relaxes as Dazai releases the last gushes of cum inside the omega, filling
him to the point that he /sees/ Chuuya’s discomfort.

He gawks at Chuuya, mouth dry, realizing that the omega is /rigid/— not in a good way.

His hands are slightly shaking.

Every second of it makes Dazai’s heart run a little faster.
He sees that Chuuya would /ask/ to be let go, if he didn’t know way too well that Dazai can’t move without hurting him.

It’s just a handful of seconds, but it feels like hours.

“I’m /so/ sorry,” Dazai blurts as soon as he manages to pull out. “Are you alright? I’m /sorry/—“
It’ll make a mess — slick and cum and lube everywhere, but who cares.

They can wash the sheets.

They can burn the nest and build a new one.

But he /won’t/ hurt Chuuya anymore.

The omega offers him a tiny smile. His hand still shakes as he holds Dazai’s.

“I’m ok.”

“Baby—“
“Really,” Chuuya murmurs, though the shadow of tears seems to glitter in his eyes. “Everything else was /great/.”

“How do you feel?”

Slowly, holding his ass as high as he can, he pecks Dazai’s lips.

“Weird,” he says, but it’s breathed out with a certain level of approval.
“Do you want me to go..?”

“What!? No. Let’s go take a shower, alright? We can talk tomorrow.”

/Is this a dream?/

“Are you sure?” Dazai asks one last time.

Are you sure I didn’t hurt you? Are you sure you want to take a shower with /me/?

Are you sure we can be… like we were?
“I don’t know,” Chuuya says, and he sounds /honest/. “All I know is that being mad at you sucks. So maybe— maybe we can see how it goes.”

Dazai’s heart jumps.

They’re out of the woods, aren’t they?

And when he says ‘I love you’ — a leap of faith that may seem premature but
that the alpha can’t keep in — Chuuya smiles and kisses him and drags him out of the nest.

“I love you too.” He grins. “Silly Mackerel.”

And just like that, Dazai’s universe shifts back into place.

(Dazai’s not sure Chuuya still loves him when he begrudgingly admits he hasn’t
eaten anything during the day, but…

It’s ok.

It’s fine.

Chuuya loves him.

And the alpha blesses the shower and the steam of the bathroom and the water, because tears are quietly running down his cheeks again.

Again Dazai can’t seem to stop them but— it’s ok.

/He’s ok/.)

“I’m sorry.”

With his head rested on Dazai’s chest and the alpha’s arm draped around his middle, Chuuya skims his fingers over his lover’s body.

He maps ever centimeter he can reach, imprinting it in his head. In his heart.

His nest smells like Dazai — like /home/ — again.
Because at some point, while Chuuya wasn’t even /looking/, Dazai became his home.

His safe harbour.

Free from the bandages, Dazai’s skin radiates a subtle warmth. A snugness that the omega never felt before, and that resonates with his naturally low body temperature.
Chuuya follows the warmth with idle movements of his hand as he traces the subtle paths of Dazai’s veins. Blue, purple.

Sharing a nest like this — basked in the early morning light, relaxed against his lover’s naked body — makes Chuuya realize he has been on edge for /weeks/.
“It wasn’t your fault,” the omega murmurs, eyes closed. “Besides, you already apologized a hundred times.”

The night before has been— odd. Brave. The wine played its part.

A foolish act of courage, of love and /forgiveness/.

Chuuya doesn’t regret a single moment of it.
Not even the pain.

/Especially/ not the pain, because it was just a mistake. It was nobody’s fault.

Slowly, Dazai turns his head and brushes his lips over Chuuya’s hair. When he speaks, his voice is low and his nose is sunk in fiery red strands.

“I didn’t want to hurt you.”
“You /bled/ under the shower, baby.”

Chuuya frowns.

“I /always/ bleed a little when I take a knot, ‘Samu. Did that freak you out?”

“No,” Dazai’s voice sounds /soft/, as soft is the kiss he places on Chuuya’s temple. “But I worry about you”

“Well, I’m ok.”

“Chuuya—“
“/You/ didn’t hurt me,” Chuuya hums. “Not on purpose. It was just a second anyway.”

Now, Chuuya knows why Dazai acts so guilty.

He has no reason to, but that’s what Dazai does best: he tortures himself.

And, yes, he was sober and Chuuya wasn’t.

Yes, they got carried away.
Yes, Chuuya felt on top on the fucking world for a night and might have acted more… /moronic/ than normal.

Maybe, in another moment, the omega would have realized that a knot could have turned the subtle hint of pain into a stab — a loud, screaming ache.

He wasn’t thinking.
And yes, their relationship is tarnished.

Dazai’s lies tattered it, Chuuya’s resentment and insecurity tainted what used to be shiny.

But Dazai didn’t force him to take a knot.
Dazai /tried/ to pull out.

Chuuya asked him not to.

For a moment, Dazai seems to drop the matter.
He inhales, and his chest heaves and falls under Chuuya’s cheek.

But the redhead can sense that the matter is still simmering; Dazai feels /guilty/.

“Don’t you dare think it’s your fault,” Chuuya growls, a little harsher than he should in the hope to discourage a reply.
He rubs his cheek over the alpha’s chest in the way a cat would have done. A ginger, content, purring cat.

Dazai scoffs.

/Of course/ he scoffs, Chuuya mulls to himself. Stubborn alpha.

“A knot was too much.”

“Honestly, I appreciate the concern, but give it a rest. I’m fine.”
Dazai hesitates but eventually says nothing. His silence, though, still speaks volumes: ‘fine, ok. You’re right.’

The truth is that the redhead might fall asleep again like this, laying by Dazai’s side, tracing lazy patterns on his skin.

Their legs are intertwined, a mess of
limbs and toes stroking the skin — it’s a ridiculously /romantic/ mess.

He didn’t tell Dazai, though: he didn’t dare to utter out the word ‘romantic’.

He doesn’t know /why/, but it feels stupid.
It seems hasty.

Their lives are no romantic novel, no comedy, no /movie/.
They’re two fucked up people with fucked up brains and fucked up hearts.

They’re two fools who made a lot of mistakes along the road and, even /then/, they decided they loved too much to let go.

They have /so/ much to talk about.

But—
But not right now.

Because being with Dazai like this is its own kind of agony, and somehow it keeps Chuuya from addressing their issues head-first.

He will, eventually, but now? Dazai seems so /tired/, now.

Exhausted and sad and on the verge of another emotional breakdown.
There’s still something deeply sorrowful in the alpha that peaked after their fight.

“It’s weird” Chuuya murmurs, running his fingertips over Dazai’s arm. Up and down, and up again. “You can command. I /saw/ you can be strong. Yet— you seem so frail.”

TW // mentions of suicide
Dazai chuckles quietly. “Are you suggesting I should start joining you at the gym?”

“Not like that.” Chuuya gnaws at his bottom lip. “I mean, /also/ that. But in another way.”

Dazai’s mouth skims over the crown of Chuuya’s head, dry and butterfly-light.

“How, sugar?”
“You’re delicate, as if you’re hold together by thin silk threads. When I touch you like this—“ Chuuya runs his fingers over the man’s arm, delicately. “Here… I fear I could shatter you with just the tip of my fingers.”

“Chuuya /could/ break me,” Dazai says. “I wouldn’t mind.”
“‘Samu…”

“I’m being honest,” the alpha insists. “You wanted to know me, and I should have let you. Now you need to know that I wouldn’t mind shattering; disappearing.” His skin is hot, alive, but his voice is distant. “If I could just /not exist/, I wouldn’t mind.”

He’s making
an effort towards honesty. And he’s starting right from the things Chuuya won’t like— which are, incidentally, also the ones he /must/ hear if he wants to know Dazai.

“I don’t want you to disappear,” Chuuya whispers. “Or to break.”

“I /know/, love.”

“Wouldn’t it hurt?”
Dazai seems to think over it for a moment.

He shivers, and Chuuya can feel it /all/ — how Dazai’s heart beats sluggishly, how his breath is barely a ghost. As if his body wouldn’t care to just stop.

“It hurts already,” he says, eventually. “Everything else means /relief/.”
/Relief/. God.

The choice of words represents Dazai so perfectly — a man who never fit in, who lurked at the outskirts of society, who always only searched for a painless way out — and yet Chuuya hates it.

It sinks in the redhead’s bones, ice-cold.
His hand stops, but Dazai
covers his knuckles with his fingers.

Chuuya doesn’t understand, and maybe he never will.

Yet, the omega realizes, his understanding is completely irrelevant.
He just needs to be next to Dazai.

He just needs to /see/ him.

“I love you,” Chuuya says, even though
he /knows/ it won’t ease Dazai’s invisible suffering.

He still says it because, after the fight, Chuuya regretted all the times he didn’t repeat it enough.

Because, maybe, love won’t save Dazai.

Maybe not even Odasaku’s continuous years of friendship will rescue the man.
However, perhaps foolishly, Chuuya still hopes that, one day, love will make all the difference in the world.

Dazai holds him close; he squeezes Chuuya’s hand as if he’s clinging to the omega.

“And I love you, Chibi. Always.”

“/Good/. As long as you remember it.”
“I /promise/ I know it.”

/But/.
There is a but, and Chuuya can /taste/ it on the tip of his tongue—

“But some days it may not be enough, and it’s not your fault.” Dazai pauses. He rubs his foot down Chuuya’s shin affectionately — a gesture so /intimate/, so gentle, that
it makes Chuuya forget the /topic/ for a moment. “Whatever happens, know I don’t love you any less.”

Chuuya almost chokes on his breath, a wad of cotton blocking his throat.

“/Don’t/,” he murmurs.

“You deserve to know,” Dazai reminds him. “And I /need/ you to remember it.”
“Just— don’t say it like a goodbye.”

“It’s not,” Dazai says. His voice rolls over Chuuya’s senses like silk, soothing. “Gosh, no, Chuuya; I’m not going anywhere. It’s a hello.”

“A hello…?”

“Yes, a hello. Hi, Chibi, this is me: the damaged, real me.” The alpha grins, though
phantom tears glitter in his eyes. “A fool who risked /us/, but who finally learned something.”

A fool, an orphan, a mess, a /boy/.

Chuuya bites back a subtle smile. “Hi, Mackerel, I guess. You’re not so bad.”

A fool who might not stick around for long.

Dazai beams. “Thanks.”
A fool engaged in a personal war that nobody can fight for him.

And maybe, one day, the bandages that cover Dazai’s perfectly healthy skin won’t be enough to fix his invisible wounds.

/A fool who loves you, no matter what will happen/.

“I don’t want you to be alone.”
The words roll out of Chuuya’s lips before he can think them over — before he can /filter/ them.

Dazai goes rigid under the redhead, his legs shifting ever so slightly as he turns his head to have a better view of Chuuya’s face.

Of his blue, resolute eyes.

“Chuuya—”
“For real” Chuuya insists. He means it fully — stupidly. “I’ll fucking follow you wherever. You are /not/ alone.” His lips curl up as he clasps Dazai’s hand. “So, /please/, if you can— don’t go where I can’t follow.”

Not ever.

Not /again/.

An eerie silence lingers in the room.
Slowly, Dazai releases Chuuya’s hand and circles the omega’s body. He cradles the redhead against his side, the sheets that partially covered them slipping down the bed’s edge.

Paper, rain, whisky — the familiar smell of the alpha fills Chuuya’s lungs.

Dazai sinks his nose
in Chuuya’s hair and stays there, breathing him in.

“I’ll do my best,” Dazai assures. “Nowhere you can’t follow.”

“/Good/.”

“You too.”

“Why should I leave?” Chuuya flashes him a cocky smile. “I’m kinda in love with you, y’know?”

"Kinda, huh," Dazai mumbles, this time the
vowels rounded by a vibration that comes from his chest. The crooning reassures Chuuya.

/His safe harbour./

The love of his life, for however long they have.

And maybe Dazai can’t promise him forever right now, but Chuuya appreciates the effort.

He appreciates ‘today’.
They'll try.

They’ll go to therapy.

Chuuya will make Dazai eat, he'll make him laugh and love until it hurts, and it will be everything but /easy/, but—

But they’ll make it work. They’ll make it last.

Because Chuuya understands, now, that Dazai’s ‘I’ll try' is not
an absolute pledge.

Yet, he realizes that the alpha’s intentions are true and honest.

Dazai is renouncing his masks and showing himself, baring all his fears and trauma and offering them so Chuuya can see.

He's telling the truth.

The good, the ugly, and the terrifying.
This is their beginning.

And how sweet this new start tastes, as Chuuya lifts his head and chants the words against Dazai’s mouth.

The sheets rustle under their bodies as Chuuya settles comfortably in Dazai’s hug.

“Hi, ‘Samu,” he whispers. “It’s nice to finally /see/ you.”

Despite his situation, Chuuya doesn’t yearn for children of his own.

It’s too soon, he mostly says. Maybe one day.

With the right person (Dazai used to feel that way, but now? He does not know.) and at the right time.

He has the café, and his friends, and a life.
Even though the normal procedure for omegas would be a C section, the /process/ of going through a pregnancy makes him giddy.

But, mostly, he never felt like he could take care of… someone, /something/ else.

On the other hand, Dazai Osamu is not the perfect parent.
He would love to be, but he’s /not/.
He never learned how to nurture a family, for he never had a real one.

He still feels invisible.

Having Chuuya around helps, though.

He makes Dazai feel seen, loved — and what an incredible change that is in the life of a half-dead man.
Once upon a sunny morning, the alpha has been rescued by a ginger.
An omega with fiery red hair and a kind heart and a tumultuous temperament.

And /then/—

Even though he has no way to know it yet, Dazai will soon be rescued by another ginger. One just as fierce, and
just as cute.

An even /tinier/ ginger, too, though Dazai always thought Chuuya was the chibiest of chibis.

Dazai stumbled upon him on a cloudy morning in the street, and fell in love.

And, to be fair, he and Chuuya may not be the best parents — not even for a house plant.
Yet, destiny has a way of shuffling the cards and changing perspectives.

And, one day, destiny manifests itself with a timid ‘meow’ rising from a back alley.

The call, ever so subtle and almost suffocated by the noises from the nearby road, catches Dazai’s attention while
he’s walking home after his afternoon classes.

On any other day the alpha might have missed the creature’s presence, but destiny has a way to make itself heard through the quietest of sounds, too.

That’s how he finds the cat.

Or, better yet, that’s how the cat finds him.
A stray, just like /Dazai/.

All it takes is one look.

One look at the big, black eyes of the tiny creature, two glossy and expressive dark beads, and Dazai is a goner.

The alpha can hear Mori’s voice echoing in his head — “you’re too soft, Dazai-kun” — but he ignores it.
He tries to silence it even if Mori /is/ right, and Dazai is probably soft and foolish. He can’t take care of himself, let alone a cat.

He probably shouldn’t scoop up the kitty — it’s so /small/, so scrawny, with pointed ears too big for its small head and body — and gently
shield him from the cold in his arms.

He should leave the cat behind.

/But he can’t/.

“Welcome back, ‘S— Is that a /cat/?!”

“I can explain,” Dazai says the moment he steps into the kitchen.

Chuuya scowls, placing his hands on his hips. “You /better/.”

“I was walking…”
The cat in his arms meows gingerly, clawing Dazai’s light blue sweater as he tries to climb out of his hold.

Chuuya frowns as if the sound offended him.

“Shut up,” he says.

The cat meows /louder/.

Dazai smiles. “He has something to say~”

“Don’t we all,” Chuuya growls — in
that voice the omega uses when he’s trying to put up a strong, mature front. “…Oi, is the cat /biting/ your sweater?”

Dazai shakes his head, mentally brushing away the comment as he pads to the fridge.

They still have milk, he reckons, and some leftover chicken from dinner.
It’s not exactly a perfect meal, but it’ll do.

“It’s ok, Hiyoko must be hungry.” Dazai can /hear/ Chuuya inhale deeply. “Ah. I named him Hiyoko.”

/Baby chick/

It seemed appropriate given the family Hiyoko has been adopted into.

(Because Chuuya /will/ agree— sooner or later.)
A family where people love each other.

Chuuya scowls.

“You didn’t.”

“Hm?”

“You didn’t seriously call a damn cat /chick/.”

“Why? It’s cute,” Dazai says, gently placing the cat on the kitchen counter as he rummages in the cabinets for a plate. Then, he opens the fridge.
Hiyoko instantly curls on the smooth surface, his orange tail hidden in between his little pads.

He purrs lightly, and Dazai’s heart hiccups.

This tiny, helpless thing acts as if he always belonged to the house, smug and beautiful and /brave/.

Impressed and a little envious
of the animal’s panache, Dazai absently scratches the cat in between his huge pointy ears while he pours the milk in a plate, filling it to the brim in front of the animal.

Dazai never felt at home in this house before Chuuya.

But Hyoko—

the cat sees a shelter where Dazai
always saw a cage, and that’s /wonderful/.

The pets earn Dazai another subtle meow in response, a pleased one, rounded by a souring purring.

“‘Samu, you can’t call him anything because it’s a stray, it’s not yours.”

“Right,” the alpha says, basking in the purring. “He’s ours.”
“Absolutely fucking not,” Chuuya says — though it has /no/ bite whatsoever.

The alpha flashes him a subtle grin.

Although Chuuya is fighting him, Dazai already won.

The omega is not lifting a finger to help, but he also seems to grin at how the cat literally climbs inside
the plate and throws himself at the milk — and he seems to give up, at least mentally.

Dazai knows Chuuya won’t admit defeat easily, but he’s ready to win the omega’s approval.

He can /wait/.

And God forbid Chuuya, his fierce little warrior, ever gives up without a fight.
Yet he’s sure that, deep down, Chuuya fell in love with the cat too.

“/Anyway/,” Chuuya continues. “You can’t name a cat after a chick. You’ll give it existential trauma.”

Dazai blinks, still petting Hiyoko. “I call Chuuya shrimp all the time.”

“And /that/ is very traumatic.”
“I still think Hiyoko is a fine name.”

“Have you never watched Lilo and Stitch?”

Dazai hesitates, studying Chuuya’s expression.
/Why/ does it feel like a trap?

“…No?”

Chuuya looks more than mildly disappointed at the reply, his lips twitching downward ever so slightly.
“It’s, like, the most important part of the movie: you /can’t/ feed a tuna sandwich to a fish. It’d be an abomination. And in the same way, you can’t call a cat like /chicken/.”

Now, Dazai has /questions/.

Many questions.

First: he’s not sure he gets Chuuya’s point at all.
He thought the most important teaching of a Disney movie would be friendship, kindness, marrying a prince or something like that?

And— why would anybody feed a sandwich to a fish?

Did he miss some important bit of pop culture not watching the movie about a blue psychotic alien?
He only ever saw the one about the weird talking llama with Odasaku’s kids and that was /enough/ forever.

(The fact that Ango said Dazai acted like the scheming evil woman didn’t particularly help).

But he’s digressing.

Chuuya’s point wasn’t the movie.

(Or so he /thinks/.)
“…Do you want a fish?”

“I’m saying you can’t call the cat like something in its diet!”

“A chick would be bigger than this guy,” the alpha says. “I doubt he’d try to hunt it.”

Crossing his arms, Chuuya rolls his eyes. “It’s a carnivore. Of course he would eat a damn chicken.”
“Well. I had a few options, if you really hate Hiyoko,” Dazai admits, leaning on the counter to better admire the kitty — his little licks, the way his ears twitch as he drinks.

He saved someone; it seems almost out-of-character, in the black-and-white movie of his life.
Dazai Osamu hasn’t destroyed himself yet and, on the contrary, he repaid some of his karmic debt by doing good.

It feels like he finally deserves his place in the world.

Chuuya scoffs. “/Of course/ you do.”

The alpha doesn’t bother asking Chuuya if he wants to hear his
alternatives: of course the omega doesn’t want to listen to them, because he’s playing the grumpy responsible adult.

/But/ he will do so anyway, because Dazai can’t — and won’t — take no for an answer.

“Chibi?”

Chuuya’s head snaps up, his blue gaze roaming over Dazai’s face.
“Yes?”

Dazai /grins/.
It’s easy to push the right buttons to rile up Chuuya — almost /too/ easy.

“No, the name; Chibi would fit. The cat is red, short, and it purrs—“

Chuuya scowls. “Your /lifespan/ will be short if you call a goddamn cat after me only because we both /purr/.”
Which sounds /dangerously/ like Chuuya is jealous of a nickname he swears to detest.

Dazai’s grin stretches at the thought, Cheshire and satisfied.

He won’t say it out loud, of course, because Chuuya would kick him into the next week, but he /hears/ it anyway. So he
gracefully drops the matter, already pleased with the reaction.
He shrugs the option away with a wave of his hand.

“Chekhov?”

“Ugh.”

“Crab? Little Crab? Mr Canned Crab would be nice.”

Chuuya’s eyes narrow, turning darker with every variation of ‘crab’ Dazai throws at him.
“I’m pretty sure that’s animal mistreatment.”

“Sensei?”

“Better, but nah.”

Dazai gently pats Hiyoko’s back, fingers running down his tail. “We could call him after Baby Vampire, since he’s so cute and /sociable/—“

“Actually, please stick to Hiyoko if you want to live.”
Dazai flashes his boyfriend a grin — a victorious one.

“Yeah, that’s what I though.”

Chuuya’s shoulders go rigid for a second, and the omega /gapes/ as he realizes that he /just/ gave Dazai exactly what he wanted.

“You know what? Forget it. The cat is not staying anyway.”
“Hiyoko is staying,” Dazai says, his hand never leaving the cat’s little body.
The animal is still drinking like his life depends on it, unbothered.

Dazai finds it oddly /adorable/, all this attachment to life.

He gently pets him in between the ears as a ricocheting vibration
raises from the animal.

The alpha doesn’t dare say it — Chuuya might throw the closest blunt instrument at him — but it /really/ reminds him of the redhead’s purring.

They both have this abandonment, this bliss; they close their eyes as they fill their chests with air.
“Don’t be ridiculous. The cat goes.”

“The cat /stays/.”

“Can we even keep animals?”

Dazai cocks his head to the side.

“What Mori doesn’t know won’t kill him.” Mori /will/ know, because Dazai will ask him for more money; But that’s another story. “But we can keep animals.”
At least, he /supposes/ they can.

It’s his house, isn’t it?

And he still prefers to ask for forgiveness than permission, especially if it involves asking his /delightful/ guardian.

Chuuya rolls his eyes so hard he can feel a headache surging.
He’s not completely blind: the cat is cute.

It’s so /tiny and hungry/ that Chuuya’s heart shrivels every time he looks at it, and— and adopting an animal isn’t the end of the world, he supposes.

The thing is, though, Chuuya never thought about adopting animals.
Certainly he never thought about adopting animals with a /boyfriend/, since his relationships never lasted long enough.

He didn’t grow up in a household with pets. Verlaine used to have a fluffy, spoiled Ragdoll, but they mainly lived in Paris.

Kouyou never really wanted to
share her precious personal space with ‘gremlins that might leave hairs all over her designs.’

But, if he has to be honest and /selfless/—

He sees how Hiyoko may benefit Dazai.

How caring for a life nobody else wanted might push the alpha into finally /seeing/ his own value.
And maybe, this is what the alpha needs.

What they /both/ need; a drop of stability, a kick of domesticity after all the recent bumps in their relationship.

“You’ll need to bring him to the vet, first of all, and check that he’s ok,” Chuuya growls, downright defeated.
Dazai smiles, mellowed out by what seems the end of a negotiation, and nods.

“I know,” he says, softly.

“You’ll be in charge of changing the litter.”

“Of course, love.”

Chuuya sighs, looks at the ceiling, and emboldens himself to say—

“…Then I guess the cat can stay.”
Hiyoko… /is/ cute, honestly.

It’s objectively a pretty animal, despite the obvious feral nature that still lingers in the details — in the unkempt mane, albeit fierce red, and way he’s aware of his surroundings even with its little head dipped in milk.

In some ways, it
Reminds him of Dazai.

As if he understood, Hiyoko meows.

Immediately, Dazai takes the cat by the scruff and cradles him back in his arms.

The sounds stop, taken over by purrs.

And then Dazai stares at Chuuya, huge puppy eyes and a trembling bottom lip.

“Really…?”
The omega’s stomach twists.

He doesn’t know much about biology and importing, but what he knows is that this damn cat is literally /sleeping/ in Dazai’s arms.

Even more terrifyingly, this tiny little cat may be the only creature on earth able to manipulate the alpha.
Now it seems like a fucking /crime/ to separate them.

And Chuuya is no monster.

“Yeah, /you win/,” the redhead says, and throws up his hands in exasperation. “Keep the damn cat for a few days, see how you like it when he claws your books.”

In that moment, Dazai lights up in
a genuine, huge, /shiny/ beam.

He crosses the room, still with the cat in his arms and wearing that beautiful, unguarded smile, and Chuuya can’t but smile a little, too.

It’s then that Dazai covers Chuuya’s cheek with one hand and pulls him into a heated kiss.
The alpha doesn’t get too close, still holding the cat in the safe but cozy hold of his arms, but Chuuya is still blanketed by his scent — that familiar scent that means home.

(Too bad that it’s now accompanied by /stinky cat/.

Hiyoko needs a trip to the cat groomer, too.)
And yet Chuuya doesn’t /mind/ the cat when Dazai is kissing him so gently, his fingers skimming down Chuuya’s jaw.

He doesn’t even mind that the damn beast is trying to escape Dazai’s grip, and started screaming bloody murder the moment Dazai’s attention focused on Chuuya.
He doesn’t care because Dazai gently takes his bottom lip in between his teeth, hand slipping to the base of Chuuya’s neck. He moans softly.

His knees jitter every time Dazai kisses him like this — like he’s gently pulling him apart with his tongue.

“Thank you,” Dazai whispers.
Like Chuuya had any saying in the matter.

But it tastes sweet if it’s whispered into a kiss, and the omega finds himself smiling too.

Chuuya raises a hand to touch the cat — expecting the feisty little beast to answer with a scratch or a hiss, chuckling when he /doesn’t/.
And he feels a little lighter, a little happier, when Dazai is kissing him like this.

And maybe love is really blind, because he’s suddenly uncaring of all the downsides of taking in an /animal/.

What Chuuya is not saying is that he fully expected that Dazai would get
tired of the cat; he’d grow bored of responsibility.

But Dazai didn’t give up. On the contrary.

A week later Chuuya is snoozing on the couch with Hiyoko on his stomach purring and kneading on Chuuya’s fluffy sweater.

(/Dazai’s fluffy sweater/.)

Chuuya feels Dazai’s hand on
his hair before he realizes, not without a second of delay, that the alpha sat down on the couch’s edge.

Chuuya has a tendency to messily sprawl like a starfish while napping, and Dazai never asks him to move.

To be fair, the alpha really never moves too much.

“Sweetheart?”
Even after all this time together, even half-asleep, the omega’s heart still /curls/ around the pet name.

He /thinks/ he answered by calling Dazai’s name, but is not sure. He might have dreamt it.

“Baby, do you want to move Hiyoko and go to bed? You’re sleeping.”

“‘M fine.”
“Look at you.” Chuuya can /hear/ the grin in Dazai’s voice even through the veil of sleepiness. “Chuuya didn’t even want the cat.”

“What do you mean?” He mumbles, drowsy and only half-awake. “Hiyoko is /ours/.”

And that’s how Nakahara Chuuya and Dazai Osamu became parents.
It’s won’t be the last time they become parents, either of animals or pups of their own, but it’s the /first/ one: and, like all first times, it’s terrifying and exciting and strange.

It’s a change.

It’s a manifestation, a sign from above.

And it belongs only to /them/.
And what a wonderful and scary thought it is, to realize that their lives are so closely intertwined to be one and the same.

How daunting and exciting it is, to know that there is a little one depending on them.

And as they fall asleep on their couch, together in their house,
with /their/ cat curled on Chuuya’s stomach, the omega sluggishly wonders if this happiness will last.

He wants it to last.

Because for the first time in a long, long time, Chuuya can say without a doubt, without hesitation, that—

/He’s happy again./

Hiyoko makes him happy.
Dazai /is/ the beginning and the end of his happiness.

Chuuya promises himself to treasure it, to guard this little corner of peace they created.

The omega wants to believe it so strongly that he misses the subtle shift — tears, salt, a stormy ocean — in Dazai’s scent.

Dazai doesn’t have a future planned.

Behind his spry, apparently organized attitude, nothing about the alpha is decided, planned or foregone.

Much like Hiyoko or his meeting with Chuuya, he improvises most of the time.

It’s never easy, but it makes life /interesting/.
Life unravels under his feet, a red carpet he never wanted, and Dazai goes with the flow, a mindless and lifeless body washed ashore.

He feels this way a lot, lately; lifeless. Tired.

The heaviness of existing became harder to ignore, these days.

All food tastes like sand.
A hundred coffees can’t keep him awake.

He only sleeps with Hiyoko coiled up next to him and with Chuuya’s hands in his hair, the omega whispering sweet nothings in his ear to melt the tension away.

He can only breathe when Odasaku or Chuuya’s scents allow him to.
If he has to find a cause for the ache, Dazai mindlessly ascribes the uneasiness to university.

After all, Ranpo is doing /way/ better than him at mock exams, racking up full scores like it’s /nothing/. How bothersome.

On other days, the alpha blames the seasons. He blames the
ever-changing city life with its people thronging the streets, the traffic jams and loud noises.

But he doesn’t dwell on this sense of illness, either.

He stifles it down and focuses in the good things: on Chuuya, and Odasaku.

On Ango, and on the relationship — which
Dazai is trying to mend, not without meeting a certain resistance — with Atsushi and Akutagawa.

All he knows is that /future/ seems…out of his grasp, now. Meaningless.

What’s the use of trying to plan every turn of tomorrow? Life never fully goes the way Dazai predicts, anyway
So, no, Dazai doesn’t have a plan.

He’s not even sure he /can/ concoct one.

And he most surely didn’t think he would confront this future plan — or lack thereof — at Lupin.

Out of all places, how ironic that it has to happen /here/.

The bar accompanied most of Dazai’s
adulthood — it saw him grow from a boy, barely of age, to a man with a house, a boyfriend and a /cat/.

Once, he was an outsider.

/Now/ Dazai can boast a certain stability, emotional as well as mental — however frail.

Who would have thought, indeed.

The alpha wonders,
sometimes, if Lupin’s wooden counter and stairs, its black-and-white pictures and warm lights, would have ever thought that the helpless drunkard they nursed into adulthood would one day escape his pain and mediocrity.

He wonders if the bar itself, with its invisible soul, is as
surprised as he is.

Odasaku always said Dazai would find his balance, one day.

Over time, Ango had started to doubt it.

But Dazai—

Dazai never dared to believe it, not /once/.

And yet here he is: heart in his hand, guiding Chuuya down the stairs of the empty bar.
The omega’s blue irises shine, almost purple under the lights, and his sunset-red strands frame his face as he looks around with wide eyes and parted lips.

As he looks at his boyfriend, who’s too busy taking in the place to mind him, Dazai’s lips curl in a smile.

His hand finds
Chuuya’s, lacing his fingers with the redhead.

Even without looking, Chuuya leans closer to him.
In response, Dazai places a quick kiss on the top of the omega’s ear.

“So /this/ is the famous Lupin bar,” Chuuya whispers, almost to himself, nose up to admire the room.
Lupin in itself is not a rarity — just another basement bar in Ginza, small spaces filled with jazz music and a lingering aroma of smoke — but the place oozes a /charming/ aura.

“Do you like it?” he asks.

“It’s— quiet.”

A laugh rolls out of Dazai’s lips. “Yeah. Just for us.”
Like he’s done many times in the past, Dazai has asked the bartender if he could pop by after closing time.

He always liked to stop at Lupin when the city is silent and the place quiet, and the mellow jazz playlist lulls his maddened thoughts.

Only, today he’s not alone.
They hadn’t gone on a date in a while, he and Chuuya.

So they left Hiyoko sleeping in a small nest of his own, created with soft toys and Dazai and Chuuya’s old clothes.

Dazai is sure the kitty will loudly complain for being left alone, even for an hour, but it’s /worth/ it.
The omega is clicking his tongue at the wine selection like he /adores/ it already.

“It’s cute. Cozy,” Chuuya declares eventually, finding a stool.

With his heart filled with pride, Dazai walks behind the counter.
He quickly picks two clean glasses, /his/ bottle of whisky and
a full bottle of red wine.

“Anything you like in particular?” he asks, uncorking the bottles with the casualty of who has done it for years.

(And for once, the alpha is glad he gets to pamper Chuuya in a place /he/ knows.)

“Everything; the whole place looks vintage and
comfortable. It suits you.” The omega turns to glance around again, taking in the room one last time. “And you know your way around.”

“Odasaku, Ango and I often stay after Lupin closes, and we are allowed to just help ourselves.” Dazai winks. “We have the owner’s number.”
Chuuya’s eyes glisten — mirth is warming them up, but also something else.
Probably the perspective of an empty bar full of wine.

“That’s hot,” the omega says, and—

God.

Chuuya has called him a thousand things, but being called /hot/ still makes his heart skip a beat.
“Is it?” he teases, a wolfish grin quickly spreading across his face.

“You having the keys to an underground bar? /Very/.”

“I’m afraid it doesn’t make me hot, only lucky.” He shrugs, and he /knows/ Chuuya is about to tell him off for downplaying himself. “The owner is a good
guy and he trusts us as long as we ask in advance. But, yes, I know where the booze is.”

“Do you have a tab here?”

Dazai smirks, pouring the wine for Chuuya and the whisky for himself.

The smooth ice ball that he shoved in his glass shines under the orange lights, tingling as
Dazai fills his share with amber liquid. “/Mori/ has a tab here.”

“Oh.”

“He covers my expenses. Well— him and the executives.”

“So you’re on the /Port Mafia’s/ tab.”

“I’m on the Port Mafia’s tab.” Dazai nods, sliding Chuuya’s glass towards the omega. “Does that bother you?”
Chuuya’s eyes narrow. He accepts the glass, cupping it immediately with both hands, but he never stops looking in Dazai’s eye.

He doesn’t turn away, not even for a second, as he says:

“Not at all. Does it bother /you/?”

“Would I rather not be involved with the Port Mafia?
Of course.” He takes a sip, and smacks his lips. Lupin /always/ has the best whisky, the one Dazai likes. “But staying out of the way is a courtesy I do to them, and I expect something in return.”

Which means: Mori doesn’t bother him and signs a cheque whenever Dazai needs it.
Chuuya hmms.
He probably considers him too cynical, Dazai realizes.

The Port Mafia is his father’s legacy, and it should /mean/ something.

But to the alpha it only means that he never knew his parents, and he never will, and he will subsequently never fully know himself.
// We inherit our parents’ sins.//

The jazz music fills the silence, Dazai keeping himself busy with his glass — finishing one, promptly pouring himself a second — and Chuuya musing over Dazai’s answer.

Quietly, Dazai steps around the counter and, glass in hand, finds his
place next Chuuya.

The omega rests his head against Dazai’s arm. An intimate, sweet gesture.

“As long as you’re happy,” Chuuya says, eventually. “That’s what matters.”

“Hm. The day I say I want to be involved with the mafia, Chuuya can safely assume I’ve been kidnapped.”
Chuuya gives Dazai’s arm a little, playful flick with his head. He also takes the first sip of his drink as if he’s now allowed to, lips touching the rim of his wine glass almost /shyly/.

They both don’t comment on the fact that Dazai is already at the bottom of his second
glass — even though he is /sure/ Chuuya noticed.

“Good to know,” the omega says, only half-joking.

“I don’t want the Port Mafia, Chuuya. Nor anybody else, if that’s what you’re concerned about. I want /you/.”

“I—“ Chuuya sighs, weakly. “Yeah. I /admit/ I was worried.”
“I’m not going anywhere. I told you.”

To emphasize his words, and because something tells him that Chuuya needs physical contact right now, Dazai bends to kiss the top of the omega’s head.

His lips ghost over the silky strands, and he can feel Chuuya /shudder/ at the promise.
“You said that at my parents’ house.”

Dazai nods.

“You remember.”

“Of course I do. But /so/ much has happened since then,” Chuuya’s voice trembles — his grip tightens around the glass. Dazai can feel him tense against his arm, under his lips. “We fought /so/ much, ‘Samu.”
He lowers his head, sinking his nose in Chuuya’s hair, inhaling the shampoo’s scent as the redhead sits the glass back on the counter.

It’s a new shampoo — one with a stupidly sweet fragrance, enough to make Dazai dizzy.

Or maybe it’s the sudden tension in the room.
Expectations that are heavier than any liquor, stronger than any scent.

They are not hugging, yet it feels like the bar is /shrouding/ them.

And Dazai can feel it weighing on his shoulders, roiling in his soul: a glimpse of a near /future/.

“We also made up,” Dazai whispers.
There’s no need to keep their voices low, yet the moment seems too sacred to do anything but. Chuuya rubs his cheek against Dazai’s arm, a purr escaping his throat.

“Yes but— You didn’t talk about being mates anymore.”

“Because I wanted to give you /space/, sweetheart.”
“/Oh/.”

Yeah, Dazai ponders, oh indeed. God knows what Chuuya thought, in that silly, overthinking head of is.

God knows what /he/ made the omega think, with his fucked-up signals.

But he /learned/ something, Dazai— and it’s that /communication/ can make all the difference.
“What did you think, love?”

“I thought that maybe things had changed for you.”

Dazai lets out a soft sigh, drowning in Chuuya’s scent.

“Chuuya. I promise you, /nothing/ changed.”

“…So would you still bite me?”

Dazai’s heart stutters. He straightens up, gawking.

“/What/?”
“You, biting me. Like, a claiming bite.”

/A bonding mark— claiming Chuuya as his own./

And he would answer, but Chuuya is /ranting/, flustered and tripping over his own words.

“Because I would be… ok with it; I’m ready. Even now.

I’m not scared anymore.

If you want me.”
It’s not a request made in the heat of the sex.

It’s not irrational.

And Dazai realizes that he should have expected this to happen, sooner or later, but— not like this.

Not when they have barely arrived at Lupin.

So, no: he didn’t plan to answer this way.
Because there is a /thin/ line between honesty and cruelty, and sometimes he fails to see it.

“Not right now.”

A cherry red tinges Chuuya’s cheeks, climbing all the way to the tip of his ears. “Well, I don’t mean /here/—“

“And I mean no.”

Only then he realizes how it sounds.
He solely understands the true weight of his words when he realizes that Chuuya’s eyes are wide and surprised, glittering with tears and overflowing with /hurt/.

“Sorry, I shouldn’t have asked—“

The omega’s voice dies off, though, fragmented into a universe of doubts.
And Dazai would like to bang his head on the bar’s counter.

/idiot/.

He’s such an idiot.

“Wait, no, I’m sorry,” he says, hurriedly, scrambling up all his courage to /explain/ himself. “What I mean is, not today. Or tomorrow.”

Gnawing at his bottom lip, Chuuya stares at
his glass as if the answer is written in the red wine.
As if he can find a promise at the bottom of a drink.

“I don’t understand,” he murmurs.

“I meant to say that I can’t be a good mate for you now,” Dazai explains.

He squirms on his stool, turning to better face Chuuya.
He hopes he’s making sense, because he’s /terrified/.

How odd.
The man who never felt human enough, the alpha who didn’t believe in anything— he’s /dying/ inside a little.

His heart is pounding in its cage, his hands started to sweat.

His leg is bouncing and he can’t /stop/.
Thank /God/ he has only two whisky glasses in him, or he would have marked the redhead out of sheer /intoxication/.

He wants to claim him.

It’s just not what Chuuya /deserves/ yet.

The omega lets out a snort from the back of his throat.

“That’s not true,” Chuuya says.
Dazai’s eyes narrow, and he leans closer into the omega’s personal space.

They are just sitting one in front of the other, with Lupin’s jazz playlist fading in the background, /waiting/.

Breathing an air thick with expectations.

“It /is/, and you know it,”
Dazai says. “But
what happened between us recently, Mishima and my past and breaking up, made me realize I owe you to know who I really am before we are bonded for the rest of our lives.”

Slowly, as he speaks, Dazai rolls up his turtleneck’s sleeve.
Not much, just enough to uncover his wrist.
He sees Chuuya inhale the moment he unclips the bandage wrapping his skin, but he carries on:

“But I meant what I promised, Chibi. I mean what I said to your mother. I’ll stay by your side like this, until I become the person you deserve. A whole person who truly wants to live.”
He unclips the gauze, carefully tearing away a piece of fabric.

It takes a little effort and the most embarrassing three minutes in Dazai’s entire life, but he’s ripped apart enough bandages to know how do to it.

The scrap of gauze he rips off is irregular and probably too
big for what he wants to do, but he’ll make it work.

Dazai hears Chuuya call his name, softly, dazed, but he’s set on finishing his /proposal/.

All masks down and just a tiny strip of gauze in between his fingers.

He shows his palm, prompting Chuuya to rest his hand on it.
Understanding without words, Chuuya obeys.

His outstretched fingers tremble like wings of a butterfly, a fairy.

“I will be the alpha able to protect you at your own terms,” Dazai continues. “I need to make peace with some demons first, but I am fighting for it every day.“
“What are you doing?” Chuuya asks, eyes fixed on the gauze, even though they both realize what’s going on.

Dazai squeezes his boyfriend’s hand — encouragingly, and god knows the both need an encouragement.

“I’m asking a question to my best friend and partner in crime.”
“Ask away, then,” the omega wheezes, a little choked up.

Then, gently, Dazai wraps the bandage around Chuuya’s ring finger.

“So… As you may have noticed, I am /seriously/ in love with you.”

Chuuya chuckles. It’s wet, tearing at the seams, but it’s also full of emotion as
the omega mumbles ‘me too.’

That emboldens Dazai to go on. To empty his heart and let the words run free.

Everything he /hopes/ for himself, and for Chuuya.

What Dazai hopes for a future where he won’t risk to leave his mate alone: never, not even when he’ll be at his lowest.
A future where he will become a healthier person.

“I will become the mate you deserve. And we will marry, the most fantastic wedding you can think of.” Dazai smiles. “I guess, what I’m asking is… does Chuuya want to be my mate /and/ my husband, even if it might take a while?”
As Dazai utters the words, it’s like his body forgot how to work — he’s frozen, even if Chuuya is already nodding.

“Yes,” Chuuya murmurs. “/Yes/.”

Now, Dazai didn’t /plan/ to propose — obviously.

He didn’t organize any of it and went with the flow like always, but he feels
every word in his marrow. In his dna.
It’s what he always wanted — it’s what he told Chuuya’s family.

/Yes/.

With shaky fingers he ties the little makeshift ring, securing it around Chuuya’s finger.

It’s not a true ring, but it’ll /do/.

Because it’ll evolve into something
better, just like their relationship.

Because they will drink for the rest of the night, and laugh, and kiss. They’ll call a cab and fall asleep tangled in Chuuya’s nest.

For now, Dazai beams.

“Then take this promise with you always, and wait for me just a little longer.”

Life is unexpectedly good for Nakahara Chuuya.

He has it all.

The man he loves turned from ex to boyfriend — /fiancé/? Does it count, if Dazai proposed to him with the clause to get better first?

He has a loving family cheering for him and two uncles who send express boxes
from L’Éclair de Génie in Paris, bless them, a cat with a bird name (Chuuya is slowly getting over it) and a group of friends he absolutely adores.

It’s perfect.

But his heart hasn’t been broken in a while, and that leaves the omega restless and bracing for the worst.
However, when Chuuya wakes up in the middle of the night, jolting out of sleep with his heart drumming in his throat and a shortened breath, he /sees/ exactly what he wants: Dazai.

His alpha, snoring softly.

He sleeps with an arm draped under the pillow, chest heaving
quietly and eyelashes flickering as the brunet’s mind chases a dream.

His dark fringe — growing way too long, now regularly tucked on one side behind the man’s ear — hides his forehead, but the muscles of his face are relaxed.

That sight always calms down Chuuya a little.
He has a /fiancé/.

He has a future.

And the omega can’t /believe/ they’ll become mates, Dazai and him.

Chuuya never thought someone would want him.

He never thought he’d get to the point where he has to call Yosano and ask for emergency contraception after he realized that
he might be at risk of pregnancy (she didn’t pry and promised to keep Kouyou out of it, but Chuuya could her the pleased titter in the doctor’s voice).

Chuuya never imagined someone would take him so gently, lift him up and turn him from wasted genetic material into a /mate/.
Some days, Chuuya wonders if Dazai is keeping him out of charity — downright /pity/.

But, just as he thinks that, the omega also always realizes he’s projecting his insecurities on a relationship that — not without surprising both parties — is cruising smoothly.

His mind
travels to Mishima, in moments of insecurity like that one: to the bad the man has done, and the bad /Dazai/ has done.

He tries to balance them one against the other — breaking hearts and trust against breaking bones —, but Chuuya doesn’t really /want/ to give himself an answer.
Because Mishima is ok and Dazai won’t do anything like this again.

(Nakahara Fuku eagerly informed her son of Mishima’s whereabouts one evening over the phone, sharing idle gossip.

// “Oh! By the way, Mishima-kun is back in town for his son! He says the mafia attacked him.” //
Little did Fuku know that Chuuya’s stomach sunk the moment the news reached him, hitting like a punch.

Hearing /that/ name and the mafia made the hairs on the back of the omega’s head bristle.

He heard his dad groaning ‘sure, the *mafia*, that’s a new one’ in the background.
“Is he ok?” Chuuya asked, only out of concern for /Dazai/.

“He can’t shut up about it, so I would think so. He keeps saying the Black Frog attacked him.”

‘/The Black Lizard, dear/!’ Chuuya’s father cried from the background.

“Frogs, lizards, it’s quite the same!” Fuku chirped.
It stole a smile out of Chuuya, since his father seemed /clearly/ in a mood and his mother /adored/ sharing gossips.

“I never heard of them,” he lied.

“Neither did anyone here, my love, but try explaining that to Mishima-kun. The boy was always so dramatic…”
Chuuya rolled his eyes. “Yeah, tell /me/ about it. But I’m glad he’s not severely injured.”

“Oh, he did spend some time in a hospital— in the Hyōgo prefecture, I believe? But broken ribs and a scare never killed anyone, my love,” Fuku replied, clearly brushing off the matter
as not juicy, hence unworthy of her attention. “His mother is saying around that he probably was beaten by a yakuza for laying hands on a hostess. You know how he is.”

Well, at least nobody believed the Port Mafia was involved.

Dazai didn’t make an orphan out of Mishima’s son.
When he reported the conversation to Dazai, the alpha’s eyes turned lightless — he apologised again, even though Chuuya had /nothing/ to forgive him.

And, in that gaze, Chuuya once again grasped how /deeply/ Dazai regretted ever letting pride and jealousy get the best of him.
How much he hated himself for contacting Mori.

But that didn’t make him a monster; just human.

And Chuuya might have been angry with the human Dazai used to be, but he is /proud/ of the one Dazai is striving to become.)

/Anyway/.

Life has been kind to Chuuya lately.
He’s taking a five minutes break, lounging behind the bar’s counter with nothing in particular to occupy himself with, when his phone vibrates in his pocket.

It’s been a quiet day, so — even though he’s alone looking after the entire place — Chuuya doesn’t feel
particularly bad about answering.

// From: Mackerel 🐥🐟
I miss you 🐥

A smile paints itself on Chuuya’s face.

Dazai promised to stop by later, but it’s like part of Chuuya is always looking for him.

// To: Mackerel 🐥🐟
We’ve literally left the house two hours ago LMAO
// From: Mackerel 🐥🐟

I know.

A second passes, then another vibration signals another text:

// I just saw Chibi a few hours ago. Then why does it feel like a lifetime?

Mechanically, Chuuya’s fingers run to his neck.
Where the bare skin feels smooth, Dazai will leave a mark.
/God, he’s so *cheesy*/.

But those words sound so genuine, so needy.

The message might come across as sappy, sure, but they /are/ constantly missing each other.

And that’s why someday Dazai will mark his neck and break the skin and draw blood, and Chuuya will become /his/.
The omega never fathomed he’d long to trade his freedom for /love/ and to belong to someone, but he also never dared to dream he would nest and enjoy heats.

/And yet/.

Dazai has been a revolution like that — a hurricane, a devastating change.
Chuuya’s smile still cuts his face from cheek to cheek — a wide, unguarded smile, boiling with the flush of a warm blush spreading across his face — as he types:

// To: Mackerel 🐥🐟

…shut up 😒💕

He’s absolutely /not/ get flustered like a schoolgirl.
Silently, he blesses his luck for being alone and able to squeal only in his head, or Ryuu would never let him hear the end of it.

“Damn,” he murmurs to himself, softly bumping his forehead against the smooth surface of the counter.

// Wait for me just a little longer.//
Little does Dazai know, Chuuya would wait for him forever.

One day, a year, four years, four /lifetimes/— Chuuya will be happy to sit in the alpha’s corner, patient and ever so loyal.

As long as he knows Dazai’s reasons, as long as he knows his /heart/, he’ll wait.
Only… you see, Chuuya loves Dazai. He would turn the world upside down for the alpha. All he said above is honest and true.

But he would also like to /strangle/ this same man he loves so much when he acts like an irresponsible clown.

Days like this one.
Fast forward a couple of hours, mid afternoon.

Rush hour, from midday to three, has been busy as hell, and Chuuya is ready to crawl on the couch and /stay there/ once the shift is finished.

He’s cleaning the sink, tending a room of tables that are mostly crowded with students
at their laptops and office workers reading paperback editions fresh out the library.

A regular busy day.

A day where Chuuya doesn’t want any trouble.

Like every Tuesday, Dazai strolls in the café a little after four in the afternoon.

The alpha smiles at Chuuya as he
casually drops his leather shoulder messenger bag on only empty table — how /dark academia/ he is, the pretentious asshole, with round fake glasses and a turtleneck and a tan trench coat that floats around his ankles.

Chuuya secretly loves it, even though he pretends otherwise.
Chuuya secretly /loves/ it, even though he pretends he doesn’t — especially because, even though he’s effortlessly academia, Dazai is not only fake-smart for the aesthetic.

The man’s wit is way too sharp for his own good.

And Chuuya feels a little underdressed in his yellow
apron and high ponytail when Dazai pushes across the café to greet him with a kiss on the lips.

Most of the customers seem to ignore them, but Chuuya spies some hidden glances a soft ‘awwws.’

Damn yeah, aw, he thinks, my boyfriend is fucking adorable.

“Where’s Baby Vampire?”
“Family holiday with Atsushi and Diablo,” Chuuya whispers, lingering against Dazai’s lips — and stepping back when he realizes they /can’t/ make out in front of a full cafe.

“Oh?” Dazai grins, mirth dancing in his eyes. “I hope they don’t get to enjoy themselves too much, or we
might end up with a baby Nakajima-Akutagawa running around the place.” Dazai says that still towering /so/ closely over Chuuya that his scent and breath cover him, blanket him. He’s cold — weirdly so — even if Dazai’s smile is /warm/. “I’m not ready to be the cool, funny uncle.”
“You would be the idiot uncle.”

“Right. Chuuya is the cool one.”

“/Hm/. We can share the title,” Chuuya chuckles. “How was uni?”

“It’s done for today,” he says. But Dazai /always/ says that. “Can I please have a vanilla latte, today? Extra shot. And extra hot— it’s freezing.”
Chuuya glares at him, sauntering back behind the counter.

He /hates/ it, because it’s the only space in the café where Dazai is not allowed. Sanitary reasons, according to company policy.

To be fair, Chuuya has been daydreaming about dragging Dazai in after closing time and
get fucked there, sanitary reasons be damned.
He’s too much of a goodie to act on it, though.

(For now.)

“It’s not that cold— are you ok?” Chuuya says, taking him in as the alpha tucks his hands in his trench pockets and leans against the cake display. “You look stressed.”
Surprisingly, Dazai gives a curt nod. His round, fake glasses (again: how /pretentious/) slide down the bridge of his nose a little.

“I’m stressed, actually.”

Chuuya frowns. “Did you eat?”

The alpha hesitates.

“I had a drink at Lupin yesterday.” He seems wary. “As you know.”
Yeah, exactly: as Chuuya already knows.

That is kinda the point, he /knows/ that already — if one stretches some mental muscles and ignores that /whisky/ is not a dish and Dazai can’t run on alcohol and caffeine alone.

Besides, that was /yesterday/.
Chuuya, instead, buried himself in his nest with Hiyoko.

He went to sleep early ahead of a 5 am start and a horrible double shift /alone/, since Ryuunosuke and Atsushi are having a romantic getaway in Hokkaido and the new part-timer didn’t have enough advance to come and help.
Stupid Fitzgerald and stupid capitalism.

Chuuya can’t even be mad at Sigma — said part-timer — because they are /lovely/, and hard-working, and they braid Chuuya’s hair beautifully when the omega can’t even do a decent ponytail.

But he /is/ mad at Dazai for clearly avoiding
the question, because he obviously forgot to eat.

So Chuuya glares at him, set on not letting the matter go undiscussed, glancing away from the steamer where he’s cleaning a jar to start on the vanilla latte.

“I know, love, but what did you eat /today/?”
Dazai gnaws at the inside of his cheek. An answer in itself. “I was busy.”

“You realize that’s not a good reason to starve, right?”

The alpha shrugs. “I forgot.”

“You’ll get sick because your stomach is crying for something with more nutrients than milk, coffee and whisky.”
“Or maybe I’m not hungry,” Dazai says — simple as that, as if it’s /normal/.

Chuuya’s eyes narrow. Irritation roils in him, as it always does when Dazai acts like he’s above — or below, actually — basic human needs.

“You’re hurting yourself.” The omega halts, hearing his own
voice and regretting the sentence immediately; he would have thought nothing of it, earlier, but knowing Dazai’s issues taught him to tiptoe around certain lines.

But Dazai doesn’t seem hurt, only mildly amused by Chuuya’s mama bear attitude.

“Yes, mum,” he drawls, grinning.
“I’m serious, ‘Samu. I bet you didn’t even drink water.”

Dazai swallows. “I did—“

“Ah,” Chuuya interrupts him, lifting an index finger. “No, the water you swallowed during the shower this morning /does not/ count.”

The alpha’s entire body seems to deflate.
/Touché/, his posture says, even if Dazai tries to act flamboyant about it. “As I said, I was busy.”

“Dazai, I’m /not/ giving you more caffeine if you don’t have anything else in that shitty stomach of yours.”

And Chuuya /never/ calls him that unless it’s serious.
“…Fine. Can we make half of a biscuit with my latte?”

“You’re having a full biscuit /and/ also a sandwich. And some goddamn water.”

Dazai pouts. “This is bullying.”

“This is tough love,” Chuuya growls, starting the espresso machine. “God fucking knows you need it.”
Even though he can seeDazai lodge a protest — a whiny /Chibi is mean/, no doubt — the alpha also swallows it down the moment Chuuya glares at him.

He mutters ‘fine’ under his breath, and Chuuya takes the little victory.

Dazai is starving himself, and is often sleep deprived.
His skin became dull in the last few days, losing the rosy glow he earned thanks to Chuuya’s /gargantuan/ skincare effors.

It’s because of university, he says, but somehow it doesn’t feel /right/ for a person to reduce themselves like this for a grade and a piece of paper.
Besides, Dazai would absolutely downplay a flu.

And Chuuya…

Chuuya, albeit he would be reluctant to admit it even to himself, is /worried/.
Dazai is an adult, but he often fails to take care of himself.

“Samu?”

“Hm?”

“Go have a sit. I’ll bring you the food and latte.”
“But I want to look at Chuuya,” the alpha mumbles, jutting out his bottom lip.

Chuuya frowns, sparing a glance for his boyfriend even though he’s still waltzing between the coffee machine and the syrups — his movements made steady and secure by years of experience.
“And /I/ don’t want you to get tired. Did you lose weight?”

Even though he’s busy and tired, Chuuya would still want to punch Dazai when the man wriggles his eyebrows /ridiculously/.

“Why don’t you check it for yourself at home? I would love to see Chibi with a nurse costume.”
A few heads turn, then, followed by light giggles. Chuuya scowls.

Aaaand /that/ is something the other customers really didn’t need to hear.

“I’m serious.”

Dazai sighs. “No, Chuuya, I have no idea if I lost weight.”

“Then we’ll check. And we should check your fever, too.”
Dazai shrugs the offer away, hooking a finger around his dark turtleneck’s collar to lift it above is mouth — a gesture Chuuya learned to recognise over time.

He is /avoiding/ the redhead’s caring words.
The reason is, quite simply, that he struggles to believe them.
In stark contrast with the black fabric of the turtleneck and the golden frame of his fake glasses, Dazai’s eyes seem bloodshot.

“Of course that’s not necessary,” he drawls. “I’m just a little dizzy.”

Chuuya squints. “No shit. You look and /smell/ like a ghost.”

“Not true.”
Now, he /might/ threaten Dazai to force the alpha to take a damn seat, but it’s the chime of the door and another customer strolling in that saves the omega.

At least, that will convince Dazai to go and let him work.

“/Please/, go sit,” he repeats, a little shy of begging.
Chuuya opens his mouth to agree, but he never has the occasion to scold Dazai for overworking himself — or to greet the new customer with the customary, joyful-but-empty smile.

He can’t because Dazai takes one step, just /one/, and he seems to struggle to keep his footing.
Chuuya can sense something is wrong from the way the alpha’s hand searches for the bar’s counter, sustaining himself. His scent spikes, weird and /musky/.

A rut’s scent.

His entire figure, all willowy limbs and pristine white bandages, wobbles.

Then—

/ Dazai blacks out. /
Sudden, and unexpected, and /scary/.

Dazai goes down like a corpse, like gravity suddenly took over him, and Chuuya’s eyes widen as
his boyfriend fucking /faints/.

He takes a second to realize it.

The floor gets pulled away from underneath his feet, but the he can’t move.
The hairs on the back of Chuuya’s neck bristle as he helplessly stares. He always thought it might happen, but the /scent/—

Dazai’s eyeglasses drop to the floor first, with a soft sound of thin metal against warm parquet.

The alpha follows — falling face-first in the ground.
It’s enough for a stunned silence — horror mixed with /worry/, and a tinge of curiosity — to fall over the café.

It’s /then/ that Chuuya hears is own voice, cracked with panic:

/ “‘Samu?!” /

Then the world starts spinning again, crazy fast, and Chuuya rushes to Dazai’s side.
Dazai wakes up in a spare bed that smells oddly familiar.

The blue paint of the walls, the soft pillow under his head, the enveloping scent of freshly cut grass and cotton and sunshine — it all points to a name.

The first name that blooms in Dazai’s mind, ever so reassuring…
“Odasaku?”

“How are you feeling?” the omega asks, gently, skimming his hand over Dazai’s sweaty cheek.

Odasaku is sitting by his side, scanning his face with barely noticeable apprehension.

The back of Oda’s hand touches Dazai’s forehead to assess the temperature, resting
there for a moment before he moves to hold the alpha’s hand.

His thumb rests on the scent gland on Dazai’s wrist, tracing soothing circles.

A familiar caress that lets him /relax/ into the mattress, melting the knots of tension he didn’t even notice before.
And Dazai can’t quite understand what worries his friend so much, and /why/ he’s in a bed, until memories rush back to him.

He felt nauseous.

He went to see Chuuya.

He—

Dazai’s blood runs cold, but it has /nothing/ to do with his friend’s cool fingers on his boiling skin.
He fainted in front of an entire coffeeshop, which makes him want to dig a hole and hide forever, but he also did that while talking to—

/Chuuya/.

Chibi must be so worried.

/He needs to talk to Chuuya./

“Where’s Chuuya?” he blurts out, his hand twitching under Oda’s grip.
“Downstairs with the children, waiting for — and I’m quoting — ‘a certain shitty Snow White to join us’.”

Even though he’s /aware/ he did nothing wrong, rationally, guilt still jabs at Dazai.

Guilt for being in Oda’s spare bedroom, with Odasaku scenting him when Chuuya is—
“Is he alright?”

Oda smiles, sarcasm dripping from his words. “Dazai… /you/ are the one who collapsed, remember?”

“Boo~ You know what I mean,” Dazai says, with a childish pout.

“Don’t worry about that. Chuuya is the one who called me.”

Dazai’s eyes widen slightly.
Even that tiny, simple gesture seems to make his skull explode, and he regrets it immediately.

(He regrets a lot of things now, truth be told, as his throat hurts and his eyes feel drier than deserts).

But Chuuya calling Odasaku means that Dazai managed to /explain/ something
about his relationship and bond with his best friend, and that his Chibi trusts Dazai’s feelings for him enough to involve Oda.

And yet, even the slight happiness in that realization turns sour as he remembers that he worried Chuuya.

“Is he angry at me?”

Oda shakes his head.
“He’s playing the knight in ‘the samurai and the princess’ with Ango and five children.
Last time I checked he was covered in pillows and was letting Sakura draw hearts on his face.

So, I think he might be /a little/ crossed,” the omega says, a smile lingering in his voice.
Dazai grins, too.

The mental image of Chuuya babysitting the five, energetic kids that Odasaku took in warms his heart.

What a great parent Chuuya will be, one day, if he’ll want to have pups.

“Oh no. That sounds painful,” he says, mirth laced in the comment.
“Exactly. So you might need to get him a present.”

/I surely will,/ Dazai think /I’ll get him flowers. It’s been a while since I surprised Chibi/.

But, on the outside, he only hmms.
Oda squints, mistaking the lack of answer for pain.

“How are you feeling? You hit your head.”
The alpha grimaces.

That makes sense since his head is throbbing and a spot on his forehead tingles weirdly.

He waves Odasaku’s worry away, though. “It’s empty anyway.”

Oda shoots him a disapproving look.

“You might have a concussion.”

“Guess we’ll find out if I die.”
“/Stop/ that. Chuuya-kun called his sister’s mate to check on you, she should be here in a few hours.”

Dazai scowls, pondering that he /might/ have been humiliated enough for today — but apparently not.

He didn’t think he would meet Kouyou’s famous girlfriend like this.
Plus, Kouyou must think he’s a terrible person: he’s always meeting his future sister-in-law bedridden or in compromising situations with her brother.

And he hasn’t seen her since before the break-up with Chuuya, so she’s definitely putting a silent hex on him.
Hands down, Baby Vampire is helping her.

And it’s definitely not /ideal/, but there’s little Dazai can do now.

“Yosano-san.” Dazzi smiles weakly. She is a doctor and /he/ has never met her before. “Not the best way to introduce yourself to your sister in law’s mate, huh?”
“She seemed enthusiastic, honestly.”

“Is she coming here?”

Oda’s head bobs down, and his thumb hovers over Dazai’s skin for a second. “Yes. You are not going anywhere until she sees you.”

“I’m so sorry for the bother, Odasaku.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. My house is your house.”
Dazai smiles — /tenderly/. “Yeah. And my house is yours.”

And he wonders how does Chuuya /feel/ about that — a voice whispering that he’s hurting the omega.

“I’ll go get Chuuya-kun,” Oda says, even though he doesn’t move.

Oda’s scent fills Dazai, warm skin on his cold wrist.
“Thank you,” he murmurs, flashing the omega a gentle smile. “I need to talk to him.”

He needs to explain. He hasn’t been quite himself lately.
He thought it was just stress and exams, perhaps whetted by a broken heart, but what happened changes everything.

And Oda knows it too.
“Osamu—“ Oda halts, a frown forming on his face. “Chuuya-kun thinks it’s a flu, but you know /why/ this happened. I can smell it.”

Yes, Dazai knows.

Fatigue is not enough to make him faint, not /normally/.

And if Odasaku sensed it, it won’t be long until Chuuya does too.
Maybe he already did.
Maybe he’s just waiting to see Dazai alone.

“Yes, it’s starting,” Dazai says, warily.

“How are you feeling? Do you need anything?”

How is he feeling? Dazai thinks it over for a moment, gnawing at his bottom lip, enjoying how Oda scents him; grounds him.
How is he /feeling/, huh?
Too bad there is no simple answer to that.

“I’m just tired,” he says, eventually. He settles for it when everything else would be too complicated to explain. “And I want to see my mate. I want to crawl to our nest and cuddle and sleep until next year.”
Thank god he will see Chuuya soon enough.

So Dazai clicks his tongue, moving on to more realistic next steps: “But there’s no need to inform Mori. I don’t feel /that/ bad yet, and you still have the suppressants left from last time.”

/You/ still have the meds.
What might seem weird to most is accepted by Odasaku as an old habit.
In silence, the omega meets the instruction with a nod.

Oda and Ango still store Dazai’s meds, even if the alpha would define himself (albeit tentatively, for now) a functioning adult.
He’s cruising better than he used to but nobody, certainly not Oda, trusts the alpha with suppressants in his bathroom cabinet.

Therefore, they agreed that Oda and Ango would store Dazai’s medicines — Ango the antihistaminics and sleeping pills, Odasaku the rut suppressants.
They keep them equally distributed, and always hidden.

“You can’t take expired suppressants, Dazai.”

Dazai scrunches his nose. “It wasn’t /that/ long ago—“

“Your last rut was well over a year ago,” Oda says. His gestures are gentle, soothing, but his expression is /serious/.
Dazai’s stomach sinks. He’s laying on a bed, yet he’s /falling/ into the void.

“Oh,” he murmurs. “Right.”

Over a year, already?

Has his body been silent for so long, then? Does it mean this rut will be a /strong/ one?

The realization makes everything even more terrifying.
No wonder his pain is so… amplified. No wonder he’s tired and jumpy and /half-dead/ all the time.

His last full rut left Dazai bruised and barely alive.
He skipped exams and ghosted people and met a /lot/ of random sex partners, but he cared for nothing.

He longed for death.
Will he come out alive from his own head, this time?

Though he has /Chuuya/, this time.

He won’t need to search for sex, because Chuuya is everything he wants.

(But he’s /scared/ he’ll ask Chuuya more than the omega can give.)

Gently, Odasaku’s thumb rubs over Dazai’s wrist.
Every light touch acts like a flipped switch, like lightening up a candle — tiny, but wam.

“I’ll call Mori-san, have a new prescription written.”

“Hm-m.”

“You don’t have to talk to him.”

“Just… give me the usual suppressants, please, Odasaku.” Dazai sighs. After Mishima,
he’s been avoiding Mori — and his conscience — like the plague. For how long it’ll work, though? How long, before Mori gets wind Dazai has a life-mate and will go to therapy? “I have Chuuya, this time. I trust him; he won’t let this rut destroy me. /I/ won’t let it destroy me.”
The moment Chuuya rushes in the room, he throws himself on the bed and wraps his arms around Dazai’s neck before the alpha can say ‘ah’.

He barely has the time to straighten up and open his arms, and a moment later he has a Chibi tightly enfolded around his body.
(A chibi redhead with his hair down and /a star and a heart/ drawn in red marker on the left cheek.

How adorable)

“You scared me, you dumb Mackerel,” Chuuya says, voice muffled by the way his head is dipped in the crook of Dazai’s neck.

He’s rubbing his cheek over the glands
on the alpha’s neck, almost /taking ownership/ of his scent — and Dazai is not /sure/ Chuuya realizes what he’s doing, but it squeezes his heart.

Instantly he places his hand on the omega’s back, patting it gently.

“It’s ok, Chuuya. I’m ok.”

“You just /blacked out/, and I—“
The alpha sighs. He holds onto Chuuya, breathing him in. “I’m sorry, sugar. Did it cause you problems at work?”

“Oh my God, ‘Samu, who /cares/ about that. How are you feeling?”

In his head, Dazai groans.
Why is everybody asking him that as if he’s supposed to /know/?
And /why/ is the answer not getting any easier with every time he hears the same, horrible question?

He feels like a train ran him over.

“I’m ok.” Dazai hesitates, sinking his nose in Chuuya’s hair. “Well— ok /and/ freaked out. My rut kicked in.”

Chuuya stiffens in the hug.
Regular ruts can be either cyclical — an alpha’s counterpart to heats — and hitting twice a year, or triggered during an omega’s heat.

Pheromones can trigger a rut, and Dazai is positive that Chuuya would have kickstarted his if only his cycles were a little more— /normal/.
But Chuuya’s heat has been a /while/ ago, and Dazai always knew his ruts worked in unpredictable ways.

He smiles at Chuuya’s ingenuity when the omega slowly lifts his head, eyes searching for Dazai, and asks:

“Will you be alright, babe?”

Dazai’s eyes soften.

He /wishes/.
He skims his thumb over Chuuya’s cheek, right over the star doodled on his skin.

“I don’t know yet.”

“What can I do?” The omega asks, laying into the touch. “How can I help?”

(What if he /hurts/ Chuuya?

But he swears he’ll hurt himself before he hurts Chuuya.)

“Chibi…”
(And hurting himself is /so/ tempting, now.

It’s a faint voice that will just get stronger with the rut.)

“I’m here for you,” Chuuya says. “Of course, if you prefer Oda to take care of some parts of it I’ll step aside. If that makes you happy, I—“

/I want to make you happy/.
Just like Chuuya only wanted to make sure Dazai was safe by calling Odasaku /and/ Yosano.

God.

Every time Dazai thinks he can’t love Chuuya more than he already does, the omega surprises him.

“/Chuuya/,” Dazai interrupts, voice stern, before the omega can launch on his usual,
anxiety-ridden rants. “Don’t even think that. You and I have got it under control.”

“I’m just saying that if it’s not enough—“

“It is” Dazai says, hoping that his voice alone can carry how much he trusts Chuuya.

Chuuya swallows, sighing before hiding his face in Dazai’s neck.
The alpha knows he’ll have to take better care of himself, or /try/, but a rut means instinct and—

And Dazai’s instincts aren’t pleasant.

It’s either wild sex or crushing void.

And they both know Chuuya is not talking about sex, for once, when he means not being /enough/.
The possibility of letting instinct take over and knot Chuuya haunts Dazai, but Chuuya is scared for the alpha’s /life/.

Chuuya’s hands close around Dazai’s shirt, clinging to him through cotton — only then, the alpha realizes he’s wearing an old t-shirt he left at Odasaku’s.
“Promise you’ll ask for help if you need it,” Chuuya mumbles.

“I swear. But—“ Dazai’s voice trails off, and he squeezes Chuuya. He /wants/ him. If because of the rut or just because Chuuya makes him crazy, he doesn’t care. “But /you/ are my partner. And you’ll always be enough.”
Chuuya hesitates.

He opens his mouth as if to reply, to /fight/ Dazai’s words, but then he just melts into the embrace.

The redhead seems so small, so fragile in Dazai’s hug, with a waterfall of russet hair falling on his shoulders and childrens’ doodles painted on his face.
But, unlike the silver thread that tethers Dazai to life, Chuuya is only weak on the outside.

Chuuya is strong. He’s Dazai’s strength.

He’s the other half of Dazai’s heart, the functioning one.

“Ok,” the omega mumbles, hiding his face back into Dazai’s neck. “I’ve got you.”
Dazai hmms, too distracted by how Chuuya’s lips trace dry patterns on his neck — right over the scent glands.

The sweet scent of the omega makes Dazai’s nostrils flare, his fingers digging in Chuuya’s shirt.

The fabric still smells like coffee, the fragrance lingering on
Chuuya’s skin after a day of work, but the natural scent of his pheromones hits /stronger/, soaking Dazai’s sensitive glands.

His pants grow tighter as he clasps Chuuya, not sure if he’s reacting so quickly because of his rut or because Chuuya is marking /him/ as his.
Every action works like a silent command that kicks every other scent out of Dazai’s system, and—

And how /endearing/ Chuuya is, acting caring /and/ bossy at the same time.

The omega’s teeth scrape over the sensitive gland, almost possessively as he takes over Dazai’s scent.
He’s taking ownership of the alpha — his alpha —, overturning Odasaku’s calming scenting with his.

And Dazai is not /sure/ if he’s doing it on purpose but Chuuya being jealous, albeit not consciously, is a sight to behold.

Chuuya’s scent, the warmth of his tongue, his fingers
hooked around the fabric of the alpha’s t-shirt, it all intoxicates Dazai to the point that he feels /dizzy/ again.

If Odasaku’s scenting is a flickering candle, timid and controlled, Chuuya is a fire in summer; free, fierce.

It’s liquid light.

It’s everything /but/ platonic.
Chuuya’s scenting is a wildfire spreading through Dazai, shaking the alpha to the core.

His mate’s scent and presence sink in his bones, drip in his veins.

He holds onto Chuuya, nose buried in his hair, pressing him against his chest as Chuuya’s warm breath fans over his skin.
What /truly/ surprises Dazai is that, for once, it’s Chuuya — ever so loyal and scarred by all those who came before Dazai — who dares to whisper: ‘mine’.

Dazai’s breath gets stuck in his windpipe.

/God/.

He belongs to Chuuya, but hearing him say it?

It’s /so/ damn good.
Even though he cranes his neck to grant Chuuya more access, Dazai bites his own bottom lip until it draws blood and doesn’t move.

He stays still and enjoys the feeling, but it’s so good it’s overwhelming.

It’s /daunting/.

He doesn’t know what he might do, he—
His rut is quiescent for now, but for /how long/ it’ll stay that way with Chuuya touching him like this?

It’s surely distracting, but it’s not /calming/ at all.

To make the matter even worse they are getting heated — once again — in someone else’s house.

In /Odasaku’s/ home.
Ango might walk in at any time, or Oda with the suppressants.

Plus there are /kids/ downstairs who might barge in squealing and looking for their new playmate.

So it’s with /immense/ displeasure, but knowing that it can’t be helped, that the alpha lets Chuuya pull away.
The omega is still sitting on the bed and one of his hands still clings to his boyfriend’s shirt — in fact he just moved away enough so they can talk without getting sidetracked — but Dazai feels /cold/.

Dazai clears his throat, a little sheepish.

“Should we hold that thought?”
“Yeah. Akiko will get here soon,” Chuuya whispers, in lieu of an explanation.

Absently, Dazai runs his fingers through Chuuya’s hair.

He definitely needs a cold shower after this, but forces himself to focus on the omega’s words.

“Thank you for calling Yosano-sensei, sugar.”
“Of course. I want her to check you didn’t hurt yourself.”

Dazai shrugs, almost casually, and waves his boyfriend’s worry away.

The only thing he bruised is his ego, for sure.

He didn’t only fall face-first in a public place, he also destroyed his nice, new fake glasses.
A pity.

Chuuya /loved/ those glasses.

(Not that the Chibi king of tsundere-land ever admitted it, of course.

But he did utter, voice shaky and needy: ‘Samu, keep the glasses on? Please?’ while Dazai was blowing him wearing nothing but those glasses.

That spoke /volumes/.
And saying no to an aroused Chuuya — flustered and with glossy eyes, slurring his words while sheepishly hiding his requests and blush behind his hand — is an exercise in futility.)

A true pity indeed.

He had plans for them.

Like—

(He /has/ to stop.

His rut is simmering.)
“It’s ok,” Dazai says, breezily, still thinking he’ll need to get a new pair of glasses /asap/. “I’m just bummed I get to meet my future sister-in-law’s mate like this. I’ll make a horrible impression.”

Chuuya’s cheeks flush when Dazai refers to Kouyou as his sister-in-law.
It’s a glimpse of a future that seems so uncertain, in Dazai’s current situation. Chuuya understands how much weight those words carry.

How much /hope/.

“Don’t be silly. You look great.”

Dazai cocks his head playfully, shooting the omega a bright smile. “Hm, do I?”
“Absolutely charmant,” Chuuya confirms, leaning forward to ruffle his long, tousled curls. “Though we’ll need to cut this hair, hm.”

“Nooo~”

“At least give it a trim. But for now, I’ll go make you some tea.” Chuuya smiles, climbing off the bed as he says that. A tiny voice in
Dazai cries that Chuuya shouldn’t leave, but the alpha is not /sure/ what he’ll do if his boyfriend stays. He /really/ doesn’t need Yosano to witness something weird, or Kouyou will evirate him. “Text me if you need anything, ok? I’ll send Ango upstairs and I’ll be back soon.”
Dazai pouts, but says nothing.

He’d rather not hear Ango scolding him like an old grandma for not eating properly, but he’ll take it over being alone with his head during a rut /any day/.

“After Yosano-sensei visits me, can we go home?” he asks instead, hope warming his voice.
/Their/ home.

Because Dazai is not sure if he’ll ever win Kouyou’s approval or if Yosano will think he’s worthy of Chuuya, but the /one/ thing he knows is where he wants to be.

After a moment, Chuuya’s eyes soften.

“Of course,” he promises. “After that, I’ll take you home.”

Dazai is lounging on the couch; an annotated copy of the Heichū Monogatari in one hand, his slender fingers sustaining the thin paperback, and petting Hiyoko with the other.

Yosano didn’t tell him anything new: he’s on his rut, has a bad knob on his forehead — courtesy of the
coffee shop’s floor — and he’ll survive.

(…Maybe.

He will surely try.)

Even though on the surface he might seem quiet, his soul is /tumultuous/.

His own head is a sticky, dark swamp where he gets stuck, and every little thing brings terrible memories back to the surface.
Whenever he blinks, the image of his parents hanging from the roof flutters behind his lids.
An image created by his head, no doubt, a fake memory born to torment him.

They smile at him, hollow mouths dripping fresh blood.

(Hiyoko arches under his hand, yawning and purring.)
But their bony hands stretch towards Dazai, inviting.

(He’s /tired/ of this temptation.)

They hiss like a siren song, calling—

“‘Samu?”

Dazai flinches.

He meets a blue gaze — /when/ has Chuuya stepped into the living room? Hiyoko has moved, too, jumping on the coffee table.
/When/ did that happen?

“You’ve been staring at the same page for ten minutes,” Chuuya growls. “I doubt any waka about wood and shit is /that/ interesting.”

A waka about wood and shit.
It’s /surely/ a way to describe the collection, and it almost steals a smile from the alpha.
/Almost/.

“I—“ Dazai swallows, voice trailing off. How is he supposed to tell Chuuya that he’s been dissociating more often, lately? “I was distracted.”

Chuuya deadpans.

His eyes roam across the alpha’s face, trying to grasp what Dazai is keeping for himself.
If he’s just a little bit distracted, or if his rut is acting up and showing him things.

Then Chuuya squints, realizing what Dazai means by /distracted/.

“Are you ok?” he asks, voice leveled even though the implications of the questions are heavy.

He’s been asking that often.
And Dazai can’t really /blame/ him, but the question nags at him nevertheless.

“It’s just… voices.”

“Do you want to talk about it?”

Dazai sighs. “Not really.”

Chuuya hmms, padding across the room and reaching for the alpha. He stops in front of Dazai. A tiny frown has formed
on his forehead, eyebrows almost touching over the root of his nose. “Ok, time to put down that book.”

Dazai blinks, taken aback by the sudden order.

“What…?”

“I’m making you slow dance,” Chuuya explains, stretching out a hand for Dazai to take. Simple as that. “So get up.”
Dazai blinks, letting his brain enough time to realize what Chuuya is asking.

The alpha automatically sinks a little deeper into the couch, defensive, resting his book on his knees.

“I can’t,” he says, grimacing. “I don’t know how to dance. Not sober, at least.”
The answer only steals a smirk out of Chuuya — that hooded grin that splits his face and makes his eyes come alive.

“Neither do I.”

If Dazai had any reason or intention to refuse to get up, that disappears with Chuuya’s carefree admission that he can’t dance.
Not an ounce of shame, just an amused glint that means ‘who cares? We’re alone’.

It means, ‘nobody can say anything because nobody else is here and, frankly, nobody outside these walls matters.’

Which is fair.
Dazai is sure Hiyoko already judges them every day all day, anyway.
/Yep. Your dads are idiots/, he thinks to himself, throwing a glance around the room to search for the ginger cat.

Chuuya must assume he’s looking for escape routes, though, because he wiggles his fingers.

“Come on,” the omega prompts. “I promise I’m not recording or anything.”
At that Dazai smiles, somewhat indulgently.

He /doubts/ a secret recording would make any damage to his already shattered ego, now, so he carefully sits the book on the couch and accepts Chuuya’s hand.

The moment the alpha is standing up, Chuuya’s arms lace around his neck.
He has to hunch to accommodate the gesture, but he’s rewarded with a smirk that could bright up the longest night.

The alpha’s body almost moves on his own, then, guided by the familiar need of killing every distance that separates him from his mate.

Inhaling, he hugs Chuuya’s
middle, heart thawing when the redhead starts humming a song.

The rhythm — like an old nursery rhyme — rings unfamiliar to his ears, but it’s slow and soothing and sweet.

Dragged away by the sound, the alpha doesn’t even notice they moved the first, unsteady steps.
A giggle raises from Chuuya when Dazai inadvertently steps on his foot, but it doesn’t interrupt the gentle singing.

Like a lantern, like the warmth of a hearth, Chuuya’s voice dissipates the monsters in Dazai’s head.

For now, they retreat in the darkest corner of his mind.
The invisible battle between his demons and Chuuya’s light goes on as the two of them slow dance, moving without moving much at all, bodies pressed together and feet struggling to anticipate the other’s movements.

A silent battle whose war cry is Chuuya’s gentle singing.
“Can I lead?” Dazai asks, quietly.

He knows nothing about dancing, yet he loathes the feeling of not being in charge.
The idea of not being the one who takes decisions slowly gnaws at his nerves.

But Chuuya shakes his head, still rocking in place.

“Hm-m. Not gonna happen.”
“Chibi can’t sing /and/ lead. Let me do something.”

“You...” Chuuya seems to think over it for a moment, and Dazai marvels at how the echo of the omega’s humming still lingers in his head. “/You/ follow me.” He rests his forehead against Dazai’s chest. “Just follow and listen.”
And Dazai obeys.

What else can he do? After all, if Chuuya taught him to live and hope, he can also teach him to dance slowly.

Following Chuuya’s voice, the only movement Dazai concedes himself is to untangle one of his hands from Chuuya’s side, grabbing the omega’s hand and
lifting it to his lips. He touches his mouth to the back of it, right over the knuckles.

His lips linger on the back of the omega’s hand, pressing against the smooth skin as they rock in the empty room.
His nose brushes Chuuya’s fingers.

And Dazai feels at /peace/.
Surprisingly, after a while, Dazai discovers a sense of quiet abandonment in letting Chuuya take control.

He trusts the omega to guide him in tiny, repetitive steps.

They’re mostly wobbling, going back and forth and in circle on the same spot, but what’s important is that, for
once, Dazai doesn’t have to worry about where he’s going.

For once, he’s not carrying the weight of the whole world on his shoulders.

Which may be stupid, because the world doesn’t give a damn about Dazai, but sometimes its weight settles on his back, threatening to mangle him.
The sound of Chuuya humming washes over him, ever so quiet, calming the troubled waters of Dazai’s rut.

Ruts are a weird biological curse.

Most of them burn alphas from the inside, freeing their deeper instincts: breed, knot, mate.

Either triggered or caused by a cycle,
every rut unleashes the primordial ferocity of alphas, a ferine sense of possession, that often turns omegas and betas into preys.

Those dangerous impulses are part of the reason why commands became illegal, for alphas in ruts don’t always care for consent.

But for Dazai—
For Dazai, every rut is a window on the /emptiness/ of his soul.

A mechanism in overdrive, but broken.

He wants, but it’s empty. He knots, but to convince himself he owns something he will someday lose.
The only true thing he really longs for is rest, atonement, and darkness.
“Are you a little less stressed now?” Chuuya asks.

The question drags Dazai back to the present — taking awkward steps in his soulmate’s arms, barefoot in a house that Chuuya turned into a /home/.

So he sighs and, for the first time in his life, he willingly reaches for help.
“It’s the rut. I’m barely controlling it.”

“I figured.”

“My brain is a mess and my bones seem soaked in water, and— I hear voices. They scare me.”

Chuuya lifts his hands from Dazai’s shoulders to his hair, fingers sinking into soft strands to massage his scalp. “I’m sorry.”
“There’s so much noise,” he rumbles, leaning against Chuuya’s forehead.

“Did you take your suppressants?”

“Yes. That’s why I’m not assaulting you right now.”

Chuuya’s hands stop for a moment, stunned, before the omega steps a little closer — almost /in spite of/ Dazai’s words.
/Suppressants are the only thing that keep me from knotting you, willing or not./

It’s not nice, but it’s the truth.

There is no peace in following an alpha’s instinct, no bottom to the pitch black pit their desires.

During school, Dazai remembers that teachers used to repeat
that an alpha will most likely always do something they’ll regret during a rut.
Accidents are /possible/.

It might be a knot, a command, or an entire intercourse— there is no /rationality/ left in an alpha, and that doesn’t always mean consent.

It’s not always safe.
A socially functioning alpha needs to control their rut, but also learn to not hate themselves for unwilling mistakes they might make.

Suppressants help tuning those undiluted sexual instincts down, but leave the /other/ impulses.

That’s why Dazai only wants to rest. To sleep.
But Chuuya is still singing softly as if his voice can fight the silence and fill Dazai’s head.

The hands massaging his scalp are grounding Dazai, and the alpha doesn’t move even if his neck started to sting a little.

“Why is it so difficult?” Dazai murmurs, almost to himself.
“I don’t know, my love. I wish I could answer.” Chuuya pauses, hands deep in Dazai’s curls, fingers tracing soothing patterns on his scalp. Dazai croons softly. “Sometimes our heads don’t make sense.

I only know it sucks, but you are stronger than that.

I /know/ you are.”
There are a hundred sardonic ways to ignore the power of those words and pretend they don’t hit close to home, but Dazai is done pretending.

He’s done downplaying his feelings, for there’s someone who can read through his lies.
He drags a heavy sigh, leaning into Chuuya’s touch. “Thank you,” he says.

“I love you,” Chuuya replies, quietly.

He says it with that tranquility born from strength, from faith.

Dazai doesn’t even need to /reply/ to know that Chuuya is aware of his feelings. In that moment,
the alpha realizes happiness and love are not things he can just lose the moment he earns them. They aren’t as brittle as he always imagined.

Those feelings are hard-earned, solid, and people fight to keep them alive.

You see, the issue here is… Dazai is no fighter.
He would rather roll on a side and let himself die than fight for his life, always the Tristan and never the Lancelot.
Never the valiant knight.

But /Chuuya/ has things under control.

Heart bursting with gratitude, Dazai tugs Chuuya closer by the hips and pulls him into a kiss.
To his surprise, it’s the omega who deepens it, opening his mouth to savour Dazai’s tongue and brushing his teeth almost hungrily against Dazai’s bottom lip.

Chuuya’s hands slide down, one covering the alpha’s nape while the other slithers under the edge of Dazai’s sweater.
His cold fingers make Dazai quiver even through the gauze.

“Say it again,” he murmurs, talking against Chuuya’s lips. “Say that you love me.”

Bossy, but desperate to hear it.

He shivers as Chuuya repeats it — “I love you, ‘Samu,” — while he palms the alpha’s stomach, dragging
his nails over the bandages.

It sounds like “I’ll save you.”

“You deserve salvation.”

“You’re worthy.”

Chuuya’s hands map Dazai’s body, unhurried, as his mouth searches for the alpha’s and nibbles at his bottom lip, lush as sin.

Every gesture sears like a branding iron.
Chuuya’s entire body thins out the already fraying string of Dazai’s control over his rut, whispering one of those mute commands that Dazai can’t escape.

/Let go./

The alpha lets out a low sound from the back of his throat, part crooning and part a grumbled, rumbling /roar/.
He wants and wants and /wants/, and Chuuya pulls back to look at him unafraid, a cocky glint shining in his eyes.

/Break me/, he’s daring him, /and put me back together/.

Dazai fists a handful of russet hair and tugs unceremoniously, manhandling Chuuya so that the omega can
show more of his neck, bowing further to run his tongue over the vibrating jugular, lingering over the pulse point — feeling blood and flesh and /life/ under his mouth.

Chuuya quivers under him, /because of/ him.

The omega is begging for more rough touches and bruising kisses.
His alpha instinct resonates with that reaction, roaring in pleasure and pride.

Dazai’s entire body is begging for more, the bulge in his pants hardening with every touch.

A reassuring, playful smile paints itself on Chuuya’s lips as he lets the alpha push him against the
table, lifting him so Chuuya can sit comfortably on the surface and allow Dazai between his spread legs.

A smile that encourages Dazai to give in once more, to trust his future mate; and he’s still a newbie at trust, but his entire body screams for physical contact, for release.
And maybe Dazai is tearing at the seams, but Chuuya is dragging him down and kissing him and hooking his legs around his body and grinding against him.

Discovering that Chuuya is getting harder just as fast as he is, slacks quickly turning tight for them both, is the last straw.
/Just let go for me/, Chuuya’s body commands.

All Dazai can say is his boyfriend’s name, sounds murmured in between kisses that border to /desperate/ as their clothes fall to the floor.

A single word whispered like a prayer, clinging to the sound like a lifeline.
The omega’s scent intoxicates Dazai’s mind, his hands are flames behind his closed eyes and his name fills his heart, his rut-dominated mind, his lungs.

Chuuya; Chuuya.

/Chuuya/.



But….

As he’s making love to Chuuya, Dazai’s mind wanders to another mistress.
That’s Dazai’s true instinct, the final form of his deepest shame.

She’s a jealous mistress, Death.

A stubborn lover.

Hell, she’s more stubborn than Chuuya — she grips Dazai’s mind in the same way Chibi holds his heart.

In Death’s calling, Dazai hears the echoes of the things
he always wanted for himself: peace, and roots. He returns a child wandering to find his mother’s arms.

// He just wants his mother to find him. //

Mafia or not, dead or not, he wants to know why; why did she leave him, did she love him?

Did she hate him?

Why did she die?
In Death, Dazai searches for a simple answer: was he ever loved at all?

Not now, he /knows/ now, Chuuya is /not/ the piece of the puzzle he’s missing, but… once?

Was he loved as a child? Why was he not enough?

Can it be death is a love language? /His family’s/ love language?
And his instinct whispers that, when love eventually fails Dazai, death will take pity on him.

Death will love him forever. Death will grant him a chance to understand.

Because, at times, love is enough to fastens suffering souls to this world.

But, sometimes, it isn’t.

“I love you, ‘Samu.”

Dazai turns his head to look at Chuuya, who is snuggling next to him in their nest.

He stares in awe at his boyfriend’s post-sex wild hair, at the galaxy of freckles on his naked body.

It’s not the first time he hears Chuuya whisper that like a secret, far
from it but hearing the redhead murmuring the words like this, with his face pressed into the pillow and the tame tranquility of a few recent orgasms, always leaves Dazai breathless.

Never the overly-affectionate type, Chuuya says ‘I love you’ more often these days.
Chuuya /always/ reminds Dazai of how much he loves him first thing in the morning and last thing at night.

He says it after sex, when the adrenaline rush comes crushing down and Dazai is left with a weird sense of emptiness— the sense of having carried out his natural instincts
and hence being useless.

No, not useless: meaningless.

Thus, Chuuya made a point of reminding the alpha he’s much needed, most of the time — even though he likes to add that he ‘surely doesn’t a Mackerel to reach the higher shelves, thank you very much’ — and loved, always.
Slowly, Dazai smiles as Chuuya settles with his head on his shoulder.

Everything seems slowed down, in the aftermath of sex.

The alpha’s crotch feels constricted in the cage of his underwear, not entirely satisfied by the lack of knotting, but his limbs are deliciously numb
and sore from lifting Chuuya against the wall to eat the omega’s ass, and his mind is /tired/.

Not tired enough to ignore Chuuya’s words, though.

“I know, sugar” Dazai says.

How uncharacteristic, to not be able to say ‘I love you’ back.
Dazai loves Chuuya.
He knows no universe where that statement is not true — and what a pitiful universe would that be, anyway.

But he can’t say it. It’s getting harder with every day he ventures deeper in his rut.

It’s not worrying for now, but how long before Chuuya notices?
“Good,” Chuuya hums, pressing a kiss on the alpha’s collarbone.

One day, hopefully in a near future, that part of Dazai will be starred with crescent-shaped bites. His skin will show his status.

/But am I enough?/, he ponders in silence. /Is this what Chibi deserves?/
“Isn’t Chibi tired?” Dazai murmurs, running a hand through Chuuya’s hair, stifling a yawn himself.

It’s barely afternoon, but they indeed earned a nap.

Chuuya smiles, a naughty glint in his blue eyes. “A bit. You /did/ tire me out quite a lot.”

“That’s what Chuuya does to me.”
Dazai /croons/ those words out, all their edges and consonants rounded by the low vibrato ricocheting from his chest, and Chuuya lets out a pleased sound from the back of his throat in response.

“So I’m the one who asked you to tear apart my underwear and break the plates?”
Dazai shrugs the questions away.

In his defense, he broke the plates while sweeping up Chuuya on the table, and he didn’t /realize/ he was pushing a small pile of plates to the ground in the process.

It was an accident.

Not that Dazai stopped what he was doing — namely,
stripping Chuuya and letting the omega jerk him off greedily — even while a pile of ceramic loudly crushed to the ground, though.

“What can I say? You make me enthusiastic.”

“Hm. I thought that was the rut.”

“Partially,” Dazai allows. “But you always tested my self-control.”
“From day one?”

“I offered to make out with you for an espresso, remember? I was dead serious.”

Chuuya chuckles, but hides a yawn behind his hand halfway through.

It feels like a lifetime ago now. Yet, that morning… Dazai will never forget the day he almost ended his life
right before meeting the person who would keep him alive.

The person who might heal his aching soul.

“Oi, ‘Samu?”

Dazai side-glances at his boyfriend at the sudden change of tone, touching his lips to Chuuya’s temple with infinite tenderness.

The omega smells like /calm/.
And the way Chuuya whispers his first name, moans it, prays to it as if it has a value never fails to be both a source of great pain and insufferable joy for Dazai, these days.

Hearing it cloaks him with a certain sense of anxiety, because happiness is a /fluttering/, delicate
thing to place in his clumsy hands.

His grip is /unsteady/ and happiness is a flickering spark, ever so precious.
The moment this rut started, the alpha has slowly begun to doubt he ever truly knew how to take care of it.

“Yes?”

“How are you feeling?”

Dazai doesn’t reply.
He has promised Chuuya he’ll never lie to him again, but what is he supposed to say?

Dazai is not exactly feeling blue, nor doing well either.

Because lately this voice has been nagging him, telling him Chuuya deserves more.

And maybe… yes, maybe Dazai /is/ frustrated too.
His body is screaming for contact, for limbs to hold and to break and to breed.

His knot keeps swelling and he /can’t/ bond Chuuya to him during sex, he can’t get lost in the warmth of /his/ omega.

Dazai can touch him, but he can never /own/ him.
Normally not knotting Chuuya is not an issue, but Dazai’s condition is highlighting the things they /can’t/ do.

His gums tingle and his canine teeth hurt, tiny fangs sharpened by the rut, and he can’t even sink them in the supple skin of the person he already sees as his mate.
He’s a mess of stimuli, though he could never admit it.

Because Chuuya is trying his best, and he was honest from the very first day: he /can’t/ give Dazai what his inner alpha yearns for.

But— but even then, no matter what they can’t do, Dazai would /never/ go anywhere else.
All the fears Chuuya has chased away return, one after the other, while he’s vulnerable.

The alpha tries to keep himself occupied: he goes drinking with Odasaku and Ango at Lupin after classes, complaining about the laughable amount of money in his bank account.
He returns home early, finding refuge in the welcoming arms of the omega he loves.

He studies with Ranpo, too.

The alpha’s green eyes pierce right through him, unveiling all Dazai’s doubts and fears, but he /has/ to study if he doesn’t want to plummet to much lower grades.
The life of the worthless student such as him swings between torments and mundane joys, and yet Dazai finds that it seemed easier, less risky, before falling so deeply for Chuuya.

Before, nobody cared if he lived or died, if he jumped or stayed.

He /used to be/ invisible.
But now people see him.
Atsushi has asked him if he was okay the day before, and Dazai…

‘Ne, Atsushi, do you think a person could be forgotten in a day?’ he volleyed back, instead.

Atsushi glanced at Chuuya and Baby Vampire, serving a customer behind the counter of the café.
‘No,’ the omega replied, hesitantly, gaze still jumping from Dazai —sitting at the table with him — and his friends. ‘I don’t think so.’

‘What if they have no family or friends?’

‘I still think somebody would remember them. A passerby, a neighbor. A co-worker, even; anybody.’
‘Not even if they are worthless?’

Atsushi, then, scowled and exhaled a soft ‘ah’.
He understood.

/He saw Dazai, and Dazai didn’t expect him to./

‘You are not worthless,’ Atsushi said, looking at the alpha dead in the eye. ‘We care, /Chuuya/ cares. So don’t even say that.’
Like a thief who doesn’t regret the act of stealing but who’s /utterly/ ashamed of being caught red-handed, Dazai avoided Atsushi’s gaze and changed the subject.

Yes; he knows that Chuuya cares.

He knows, but—

“/Osamu/,” Chuuya calls, softly poking the alpha in the ribs.
The pad of the omega’s finger meets new bandages, because Dazai prefers to keep them on while his mental health is so easily joggled and thrown off balance.

Still, Chuuya’s voice cuts like a dagger in the darkness of Dazai’s mind, bringing him back to the present.
Dazai winces.
“Yes?”

“You’re thinking bad thoughts again, sugar,” Chuuya says, softly. “You’re wandering where I can’t follow.”

Dazai sighs. “I am,” he admits.

“Do you want me to talk? Distract you?”

/He doesn’t deserve Chuuya/.

Swallowing dry, the alpha pushes Chuuya closer to his body.
“Tell me again why Arahabaki’s legend is historically inaccurate, and it’s a tourist trap?” he tries, voice ever so shaky.

/Keep me alive./

That’s assured to set Chuuya off, igniting the redhead’s spirit enough to let him talk while Dazai is lulled into a semblance of sleep.
Promptly, Chuuya straightens up and gestures for Dazai to do the same.

The omega is now sitting cross-legged in the middle of the nest, smiling and gently guiding the alpha to rest his head on his lap.

Unsure, Dazai obeys.

Before he can comment, Chuuya’s fingers are playing
with his hair and the omega’s thighs serve as a soft, warm pillow.

A fragrant pillow that welcomes Dazai as he settles on his boyfriend’s lap, in that spot that seems /molded/ to rest his wary head.

Chuuya is only wearing his underwear, and the alpha’s mind relaxes a little
with the renewed skin-on-skin contact.

Chuuya pets his ebony curls, pleased and hmming tenderly, and Dazai glances up at him through his lashes.

“So…?” he encourages.

“So,” Chuuya says, “Arahabaki is bullshit.”

Dazai laughs softly. He feels like a child — a sad, uneasy child
soothed only with cuddles and fairytales.

“Yes, love, I know.”

“Once deity of travelers, it became symbol of treachery under the first emperor, yeah?

It was declared heresy for political reasons because a rebel who worshipped ‘Baki happened to be a bitch to the big guy™️…”
As Chuuya rants of shrines, of the god of travelers and chaos, of cults and myths, Dazai lets the beloved voice rock him asleep.

He melts under the hands toying with his curls and sinks into the welcoming softness of Chuuya’s body.

/An omega he’s ruining with his tainted mind./
He can’t let this relationship crumble, the alpha tells himself, but the truth is— /he/ lacks any decision power.

Chuuya might be his harbor, but Dazai is nothing but sand at the mercy of storm-tossed waves.



/ Chuuya said they should trim Dazai’s hair, and trim they did. /
Dazai is completely against it, his body perpetually swinging between numbed and moody because of the rut, but there’s little he can do.

Yes, he /did/ steal and lose all Chuuya’s bobby pins.

Yes, he /did/ forget to buy new ones.

Yes, his vision /kinda/ started to be
bleared by the shadows of dark, curly strands bouncing in front of his eyes.

No, he’s not bothered by it.

But, although Chuuya swears he /likes/ his alpha with a tiny ponytail, well… he’s not enjoying the prospect of Dazai walking into walls because he can’t /see/ properly.
He’s is also easily persuaded, these days, either because he doesn’t have enough energy to fight or because Chuuya (a naughty smart Chibi, Chuuya is) knows how to play his cards.

Which is to say, he asks while Dazai is just about to reach his orgasm, far too gone to /think/.
And Chuuya /knows/ it.

Chuuya knows him so well, Dazai might cry every time he thinks about it.

It still hits him how /close/ he was to losing Chuuya. And maybe it’s still not /healthy/ how dependent he is on the omega, but…

But Chuuya is his /anchor/ to the world, he’s
his beating and bleeding heart.

And /also/, Chuuya promised they wouldn’t need to go out, that a hairdresser would be a nice option but not a necessity.

He knew just the right person for the job, he said.

It’s not like Dazai needs to see anybody or even leave the house.
Dazai can just relax, uncomfortably sitting on the edge of the bathtub, and—

“Now sit tight. I don’t want to accidentally cut your face.”

At the corner of his vision, Dazai can see Chuuya nod gingerly. “Please don’t, I like that face.”

—Chuuya /and/ Atsushi can trim his hair.
It’s a one person job, normally, but Dazai came to realize that /nothing/ is ever easy or lonely in Chuuya’s close-knit group of friends.

Chuuya didn’t trust himself and Atsushi has some experience, so they teamed up.

They joined forces with that effortless complicity that
comes after years of friendship and togetherness.

That effortless complicity Dazai only shares with Odasaku, and only because on some days he’s /afraid/ Odasaku sticks by his side out of pity and habit.

But /anyway/, Atsushi’s hand is steady when it comes to cutting hair.
Dazai can barely feel it at all, only knowing that Atsushi is working because of the soft snipping sound of the scissors and the white-haired boy moving around him.

Chuuya stays close, too, his presence allowing Dazai to /relax/ and rest his wary mind for a minute.
The alpha closes his eyes, too, when Chuuya skims a gentle thumb over his wrist.

“You’ve done it before, Atsushi-kun,” Dazai hums. It’s not a question.

Atsushi hesitates. “Well, I developed quite a lot of soft skills at the orphanage.”

/Orphanage/.

Dazai’s eyes flutter open.
“I didn’t know,” he says, almost as an apology.

While in Dazai’s line of sight, the omega smiles softly.

“It’s ok, I know you didn’t. I just used to cut the other children’s hair, sometimes.” The omega stops. “That was before being adopted. Before meeting—“

/Ryuunosuke/.
Dazai tries to glimpse at Atsushi, but is forced to tilt his head to the side when the omega prompts him to.
They might be more similar than Dazai expected.

“Was it a long time ago?”

“I was in elementary school,” Atsushi says, voice dull. “Gin-chan and Ryuu lived next door.”
Dazai chuckles softly. “I bet that ending up with Baby Vampire was a delight.”

“I used to think everything was better than the orphanage,” the omega says.

It’s a /colorless/ statement, yet his eyes grow dark as Atsushi mentions the place.

Chuuya tenses too, his scent shifting
from relaxed to worried.

The reaction makes Dazai wonder — and silently dread — what else Atsushi was forced to learn, other than cutting hair.

It made him resilient, yes, but scarred

Just as scarred as Dazai is, perhaps — he was only strong and lucky enough to grow out of it.
(/We are our parents’ sons.

We carry their sins, their blood./

But then— neither Dazai or Atsushi know their parents.

So, do they know themselves?)

In a gesture that needs no words, no explanation, Akutagawa pushes away from his corner against the wall to reach for his mate.
He kisses the crown of Atsushi’s head, tenderly. /Protectively/.

“It’s really ok,” Atsushi says.

“Good,” Akutagawa murmurs, into the omega’s hair. “You’re doing a great job, ok?”

/‘His stars and moon’./

Almost instinctively, Dazai glances at Chuuya.
To /his/ stars and moons and all the galaxies — to his fire and ocean, if the alpha has to find something that describes Chuuya.

But the truth is, there is /nothing/ in any universe that can match his mate’s fierce beauty.

Chuuya’s worried frown melts into a smile when their
eyes meet, and he shakes his head in a mute ‘don’t worry, it’s ok. Atsushi would rather not talk about whatever happened there.’

Which is something Dazai can understand.

He /respects/ it.

In the meantime Atsushi nods and lets out a sigh, leaning against Akutagawa for a second.
Oddly enough, Dazai finds himself thinking that it’s almost /weird/ to not have Atsushi’s hands messing with his hair.

It’s /relaxing/.

“Ryuu?”

“Hm…?”

“Can I please go on?”

How soft that request is, and yet how quickly Akutagawa leaves his omega more space to breathe.
“Of course.” Obediently, even though he lingers closer than before, Akutagawa returns to rest against the wall. “By the way, what’s this? I thought we were sacrificing the clown to Arahabaki.”

“I’m right here~,” Dazai sing-songs.

Chuuya grimaces. “Maybe later.”

“/Chibi!/“
Akutagawa scowls. “Chuuya said we were cutting him.”

“I said we were cutting his /hair/.”

“Same difference.”

“…It /is/ kind of different?” Chuuya says, glancing at his best friend who just shrugs the comment away.

Atsushi chuckles, his movements steady and fast as he takes
smaller strands of Dazai’s dark hair and cuts just the tips (Chuuya made sure of it).

“We’re not cutting him,” Atsushi declares.

/Please, by all means, go on,/ Dazai thinks to himself. /Free me/.

It’s a lazy thought, though.

He’d never do something like that, not to /Chuuya/.
He’s never going to break Chuuya’s heart like this. Akutagawa doesn’t seem to have the same regards.

“I don’t know. Accidents happen.”

“I thought you’d rather drink my blood, being a baby, petty vampire,” Dazai hums.

The omega’s grey eyes narrow.

“I don’t drink garbage.”
“/Hey/!” he cries, trying to turn toward Akutagawa.

Which is… /not/ a smart move, as he /feels/ the cold steel of the scissors nib at his forehead. Atsushi lets out a soft ‘oof’.

“‘Samu, if you don’t stop moving Atsushi will hurt you for real,” Chuuya says — half miffed and
half /worried/. “Please, don’t make me bury you. I can’t afford rent on my own.”

“Not planning on it,” Dazai says.

Chuuya’s chest seems to deflate. “Cool. Thanks.”

(Or maybe it’s just what the alpha /wants/ to see.

He just wants to convince himself someone will mourn him.)
/Do not make me bury you./

Dazai is not /sure/ if Chuuya is truly joking; it’s a graphic, ominous phrase at best.

And when he says he’ll stay alive it might not be a forever promise, but it’s a vow he’s renewing every single day with effort /and/ devotion.

/Endless/ devotion.
And Chuuya sees it every day, he appreciates it.

Chuuya appreciates /him/.

It’s lulled by those thoughts that Dazai allows himself to relax once more, pliant under Atsushi’s hands and relishing how Chuuya’s thumb rubs on his wrist.

/Mine/.

That’s what every single one of
Chuuya’s gestures scream: mine.

“How does it look?” he hears Atsushi ask. The sound seems to come from far away.

“I think that’s enough?” Chuuya says, craning his neck to look at how much the other trimmed. “I like the hair long.”

Dazai grins. “Chibi likes to pull at my hair.”
Chuuya smirks, wolfish.

He doesn’t comment but he doesn’t /have/ to.

And, since Dazai has no preference on how he wants his own hair, he’s /delighted/ to have his mate pick for him.

From his corner, Akutagawa scrunches his nose and rolls his eyes. “Ugh. Too much information.”
Dazai’s eyebrows jolts up, and a cruel, sharp kind of mirth turns his eyes into liquid gold.

“Oh, and Chibi likes to be on top, and when he sobs for my—“

Chuuya shrugs. “‘Samu, not in front of our son.”

“He needs to know that his parents have sex.”

“Hm. /Lots/ of sex.”
“Everywhere.”

“Especially against the wall where Ryuu is now,” Chuuya agrees, just for the sake of disgusting Akutagawa.

The last part is not true, but Baby Vampire doesn’t need to know.

“Oh my god, I hate this house and you perverts so much,” he cries, throwing up his hands.
Chuuya barks a chuckle — it’s low and /husky/ and honest.
A sound that comes from the stomach, from raw emotions.

/No, Baby Vampire doesn’t really hate them.
Not even a little bit./

“It’s nice,” Atsushi murmurs then, almost to himself.

Only Dazai appears to hear him.
He doesn’t explain, but the alpha can guess the true meaning of the words anyway: it’s nice to see that everything is back to how it was /before/.

It’s nice to see that they can still function — they can laugh, and pretend they’re still Akutagawa’s doting parents while the omega
threatens to murder them in their sleep for the inheritance.

Dazai smiles.

It’s a hurricane and a homecoming to be welcomed back by his mate’s friends.

Knowing that /Odasaku/ is welcome, too.

“Thank you, Atsushi. I feel lighter,” he says, honestly, in the same soft timbre.
And this time… just this time, if he plays his cards right, Dazai dares to hope that his past, his /legacy/ and true surname won’t rob him of this rare corner of peace.

His head is /definitely/ lighter, yes, but his heart too.

For however long it’ll last, he’ll enjoy it.
“You’re all good now,” Chuuya says.

Dazai can /hear/ appreciation dripping from Chuuya’s voice — thick, heavy with affection.
Instinctively he straightens up, tilting his chin up.

Atsushi nods. “You’re handsome.”

“Now, that’s an overstatement,” Akutagawa says, scowling.
With a smile, Atsushi waltzes to the other omega’s side. Akutagawa seems to /lean/ into his presence as the other walks to him.
Yet, instead of giving him a hug, the omega elbows Akutagawa right in the ribs.

“Be nice,” he says.

When Chuuya snorts a chuckle, Atsushi happily
waves his scissors before sitting the object safely next to the sink.

Dazai pretends to not follow the banter — though he does, and it’s /calming/.

He never believed much in forgiveness — for he never knew it before Chuuya — but, now, he finds that he might have been wrong.
He thought Atsushi hated him.

He presumed Baby Vampire would never speak to him after the fight with Chuuya, but now he hopes that things can be fixed.

And he could admit it all, he could /thank/ the people around him for understanding, but he’s never been good at sharing.
“Well~ I wonder how many beauties will be charmed now, if I really look this good,” Dazai says instead — his voice made lighter, younger by the joke.

That drives three pair of eyes right back on him.

Golden ones, widened with surprise.

Grey ones, murderous.

And blue ones—
Dazai stares into his mate’s gaze, turned thunderous by the comment, and grins.
How he loves to see the sky in Chuuya’s eyes clouded by a tinge of possessiveness, of fierce anger.

He joked like that for /one/ reason, and one reason only.

Which is—

Chuuya pouts. “Excuse me!?”
/Here it is/

It’s almost too easy, because Chuuya’s reactions are mapped all over Dazai’s memory.

He knows how to make him smile and cry, and how to flip that fervid jealousy switch in Chuuya that Dazai /relishes/.

It makes a hundred butterflies explode in the alpha’s stomach.
Satisfied, Dazai stands up; without sparing a single glance for the mirror, he reaches for Chuuya.

He takes his hand and Chuuya /lets/ him, shuddering when Dazai’s lips brush his ring finger.

It’s with a hooded smile and a low voice that he ask: “Hi, Chibi. Are you charmed?”
Dazai can almost hear the moment his comment /clicks/, and Chuuya /realizes/ the true meaning behind his words.

/I can charm all the beauties/.

And Dazai— he is a womanizer, a flirt, an idiot and a broken person, but there is only /one/ beauty he cares about.

Chuuya blinks.
Dazai grins right back, letting his sentence sink in.

His lips remains pressed to Chuuya’s finger even as Chuuya stiffens and turns a popping red. The blush tinges the neck, first, crawling up to the omega’s ears.

/One beat of silence./

He’ll guess Dazai is making fun of him
when, truly, the alpha means every single word.
Chuuya opens his mouth. He closes it again, swallowing loudly.

/Two—/

Though… yes, the alpha /is/ making fun of Chuuya a little.

Because he can, and because a flustered Chibikko is always an hilarious sight to behold.

/Three—/
“Not at all!?“ Chuuya bellows, slapping his hand out of Dazai’s grip. “Go back to looking like a Tibetan terrier, see if I care! Sappy idiot!”

(Still, Chuuya spends the rest of the evening gently playing with Dazai’s hair.)

Ah, to live with a tsundere, Dazai thinks.

To /live/.
/“Can I have a word?”/

Dazai stops midway out of his bedroom.

After dinner — Dazai tried to cook omelets and, predictably, they ended up ordering pizza — Dazai excused himself to grab his suppressants.

He tried not to call himself a pill-popper while he swallowed two pills
without water, but the whole sequence of gestures took /way/ too much strength.

Don’t look in the mirror.

Don’t focus on the scent of self-hatred you’re oozing.

Don’t swamp in one go the five pills Odasaku allowed you to keep in the house.
He trusted you; don’t betray that.
Don’t hate yourself for needing suppressants.

Don’t hate yourself, period.

The string of seemingly inconsequential actions — one tiny, /excruciating/ exercise in self-control after the other — leaves Dazai longing for his boyfriend’s cuddles. For his lover’s touch on him.
Therefore, Dazai is not exactly /excited/ to be ambushed by Baby Vampire just out of his room.

There’s this combination of details in Akutagawa — his tight-lipped scowl, his thin eyebrows, his pale skin and dark clothes — that makes the boy menacing in a non-traditional way.
He’s not hefty or muscular but, just like Chuuya, he can /hurt/.

If Chuuya is pure ‘I’ll kick you in the shin and it’ll fucking hurt’ energy, Akutagawa belongs more to the ‘I have a red list of enemies and they’ll die’ side.

Dazai looks at the omega, evaluating his options.
Carefully, he steps back into his room; Akutagawa follows.

“Sure. It’s everything ok?” he asks, closing the door behind them.

Akutagawa steps in as if he’s walking in a /battlefield/.

“You tell me,” he says. “Chuuya and ‘Sushi might want to play house, but I /remember/.”
Dazai’s shoulders sag.

As it appears, he was wrong.
/Nothing/ has been forgiven and forgotten, and he should have seen it coming.

He rubs one hand over his eyes, exhaustion overflowing from the gesture as he inhales.

“Akutagawa, if there is /anything/ you want to clarify…”
The omega’s eyes roam across his face — he’s searching for something, and Dazai would like to know /what/. “I think I‘ve seen enough. Liars don’t change overnight.”

“No,” Dazai says, voice sharp. “I suppose they don’t.”

“I told Chuuya he’s making a mistake.”

Dazai flinches.
It’s not the disappointment of knowing that Chuuya’s friend doesn’t like him that burns, but the fact that the omega might decide to /consider/ that advice one day.

Dazai grimaces. “That’s unfair. Chuuya is finally happy.”

“Is he? You lied to him about your name, your /bonds/.
You wouldn’t even have said a word about Mishima if that hadn’t come back to bite your ass.”

Dazai gnaws at his bottom lip.

He can’t fight that back, because he had every intention to go behind Chuuya’s back. That’s just who he /is/.

He thought he was protecting Chuuya.
His inner alpha whispers to Dazai to command Akutagawa into silence.

He breathes, and lets the temptation wash over him.

He’s sure a /good/ alpha would rip this omega apart for how boldly he dares to diminish his relationship — something good, something /holy/ — with his mate.
But that would mean defending his pride while giving up on everything else.

And, frankly—

Dazai knows where Akutagawa comes from; it’s a place of protectiveness, of friendship.

Although empathy and understanding mean little when his hands sizzle to punch the omega’s face.
He smirks. “I didn’t exactly point a gun at Chuuya’s head when he accepted to be my mate.”

“Mate,” Akutagawa echoes. “You keep throwing that word around, but you /already/ have a bond.” His face crumples as if his words tasted sour. “Who’s the fallback, Dazai? Undecided?”
Dazai’s jaw locks. “/Careful/. Those are different bonds.”

He’s gritting his teeth so hard that one of his fangs, sharpened by the rut to better bite omegas, opens a burning cut on his inner cheek.

It hurts, but it’s nothing compared to the insinuations thrown at him.
Akutagawa crosses his arms on his chest, almost /defiant/.

“So Chuuya says. Yet you give the keys to your apartment to another omega and forget to tell your boyfriend.”

Dazai’s heart hiccups.

“Chuuya told you.” It’s not a question.

“He did.”

Considering by Akutagawa’s tone,
it wasn’t a good conversation. He wonders for how long Akutagawa mulled over this — how many times he silently judged Dazai.

“Chuuya knows everything about it,“ he says. “He knows I love him.”

“But he’s just making it easy for /you/,” Akutagawa roars. It’s not the tone itself
that makes Dazai flinch, but the fact that Akutagawa doesn’t shout. His anger is quiet, normally. Now, it’s everything but.
“Don’t you know him, by now? He’d rather fix you than admit when he’s insecure!”

Dazai’s lips part.

Is—

Is this what he should do to care for his omega?
/I’m making you slow dance. So get up./

“I’ll talk to him,” he murmurs.

Akutagawa’s eyes soften, then. He coughs, as if raising his voice ruined his lungs, but it calms him too. “Good. He won’t because he’s convinced he can share you. But /should/ he share?”
/If I’m not enough…/

Chuuya /did/ say that, didn’t he? He believed Dazai would need someone else.

This is not happening, Dazai wants to tell himself, not when he’s vulnerable.
Every word sinks in his marrow — amplified by the rut, sharp and loud, but hurting because it’s true.
“No,” Dazai agrees. Almost in response to the omega’s growl, he can only speak in a low, hushed voice. “And I never asked him to share.”

“I’m not sure about it,” Akutagawa admits. “Only you can reassure Chuuya.”

Dazai’s lips stretch in a tight line, tasting iron in his mouth.
Irritation roils in him out of control — fueled by the hormones.

He refuses to answer futile, unfair ‘who do you love the most?’ questions.

He /won’t/ decide between his best friend and his boyfriend unless one of them asks him to — and, in that case, he’d figure out a way.
All Dazai can do /now/ is own up to his mistakes, reassure Chuuya and enjoy the time he’s granted with the redhead.

What he /won’t/ do is hate himself more than he already does.

The alpha stretches his hands, trying to shake off the feeling of being a terrible person.
The first words seem to refuse to leave his mouth, but they roll out more easily as he goes.

“Look, I appreciate the heads up. You might not believe it, and frankly I don’t care, but I /know/ Chuuya.”

Yet, Dazai wants to learn more. He wants to learn everything, day after day.
Together. “I know how insecure and kind he is, and I chose him.

I repeat that choice every day. I always will. Chuuya and I are planning a family, a future.

But my relationship with /my/ mate is none of your business. You don’t have a /say/ in it.
End of the conversation.”
Akutagawa nods — and he seems /satisfied/? Less confrontational?

Maybe it’s the effect of the suppressants, Dazai ponders. Maybe he’s drugged.

(Or maybe he said something worth listening, and he’s been /heard/.)

“I hope it is.” The omega seems to think over Dazai’s words for
a heartbeat, but then he sighs. Or, better, he /deflates/ — again, the sight puzzles Dazai. “Chuuya deserves better than being used and left. You helped him accepting himself; don’t fuck that up again.”

Gingerly, Dazai nods.

Akutagawa challenging him, making sure Chuuya’s
well cared for, calling him a clown are all /familiar/ things.

A voice in him — his inner alpha, awake and alert — whispers to Dazai that /this/ is his clue to consider the whole discussion sorted and run to Chuuya. He’ll find comfort in his omega, and love.

He’ll find home.
Instead, he decides to test his luck, lips twitching up at the memory of Akutagawa shouting to his face.

“You don’t like me,” Dazai says, between a tease and a provocation.

The omega scans his face, irises — grey pebbles of the color of wet stones, of a cloudy day — narrowed.
“No, I don’t. What have you ever done to make any of us like you?” Akutagawa sighs, then, running a hand through his dark air. A small sign of defeat. “But Chuuya believes you are /the/ one. He sees a future in the circus, I guess.”

Dazai smiles — subtly, softly.
He allows himself that little gesture only because Akutagawa’s scent turned calmer, now; it’s not /burning anger/ anymore, just mild annoyance.

“I’m honored.”

“I never saw him seriously consider a future with someone.”

At that, Dazai chuckles. No joy, only raw hope and a
hissing sound. They’re both betting a lot on this, Chuuya and he. “Tell me about that.”

“Just— don’t break my best friend’s heart again,” Akutagawa says, not without effort. He deadpans. “I’ll even say please, just this once.”

It comes across as a weird, backhanded blessing.
/Just this once/.

And Dazai supposes he can make peace with the fact that Akutagawa doesn’t like him, for now.

He’ll accept that the stubborn Baby Vampire will probably still hate him in the short run, because apparently some mistakes can be buried but not forgotten.
Thankfully, he plans to have a /lifetime/ to earn Akutagawa’s true approval.

To be fair, Dazai can’t quite bring himself to be angry because Akutagawa Ryuunosuke cares about his friends more than anything else in the world.

He’s violently loyal, and upfront, and ready to fight.
Yet, the alpha can’t say their conversation didn’t have consequences.

/Liars don’t change overnight./

But, when it comes to who threw Dazai off the edge and who stirred his thoughts out of control, a few people other than Akutagawa share the blame — starting with Dazai himself.
In the end, who /truly/ pushed Dazai Osamu beyond the point of no return remains unclear.

What Chuuya will remember, in hindsight, is that it all started with a cold bed, a kiss and a bridge.

It started with a phone call answered, and a phone call lost.



“Hello, Dazai-kun.”
Dazai’s grip on the phone tightens, too puzzled to find a greeting apart from “no”.
That’s all his mind is screaming while the alpha plummets on the kitchen chair: no.

His knee-jerk reaction would be to yeet the phone, stomp on it and scream.

He never replies to Mori’s calls.
Damn, he only took /this/ one because an unknown number popped on the screen.

He answered because Ranpo likes to call him last minute — the boy keeps forgetting his phone and ‘a genius can always ask to borrow a phone’, or so he says — and needs directions to get to the library.
Dazai never comments on it. It’s been two years, he’s /used/ to it.

In any case, though he’d never admit it, the alpha enjoys meeting up with Ranpo at the train station.

But he never thought…

“New phone?” Dazai asks, a polite lilt barely coating the sourness in his voice.
“Not exactly.” A pause, and Mori clicks his tongue. “You’re an evasive one, unless you need something.”

“I learned how to be evasive /from you/.”

“Then I’m sure you also learned how to reach someone who doesn’t want to be found,” Mori says, amiable.

If Dazai didn’t know him,
one could say Mori is amused.

/Only, he isn’t./

Dazai can /hear/ the true nuance in his guardian’s voice: anger, cold and cutting like a blade even when covered in honey.

/He used a burner phone/, Dazai guesses, lips stretching in a mirthless smile as he mulls over
what’s wiser: if to hang up to his guardian’s face and be punished, or stay and risk an unpleasant conversation.

Truth is, he should have known Mori would get in touch with him one way or another, eventually.

// Unless you need something //

Again, Dazai learned it from him.
Now, the alpha never took misplaced pride in being a bad son — even if just an adoptive one.

He never boasted about not even trying.

However, their relationship seemed doomed from the beginning, baptized in blood and grown in silence.

Dazai met him while he was sitting in the
veranda of his house, waiting for his dead mother to wake up and cook dinner.

He was waiting for things to go back to normal, young enough to believe that normality ruled over death and not the other way around.

He was but a kid when Mori squatted down next to him and asked
Dazai if he understood what was going on.

Dazai remembers he was puzzled, not afraid.

He remembers the bright white coat, the deceptively sweet smile, the light stubble covering the man’s cheeks and chin.

Mori was the first person — adult or not — to truly acknowledge him.
Such a scary doctor talking to a scrawny kid in a white school uniform like an adult.

Why?, he wondered in his little brain. /Why/.
It didn’t seem right.

‘You know your mother won’t wake up, right?’ he said.

Dazai didn’t. The revelation obliterated something in him.
Now he
knows, because Dazai remembers the loud crack of his heart breaking. But the kid didn’t let surprise seep through the cracks; he just blinked, expressionless.

‘…’

‘You also know that coming with me is the best thing for you.’

Was it? Dazai didn’t move, silent as the night.
His eyes opened like wounds on his face, like moons, crimson red and bottomless.

He might have been bleeding tears, but the wounds remained dry. Unscathed.

Suddenly, his head and unruly mop of dark hair and numbed brain felt too heavy for his little neck.

Mori smiled.
‘Let me deal with it. You’re a smart kid.’

Only six years old, Dazai liked being called smart.
That day, he picked sides in the Port Mafia council before even understanding what the Port Mafia was.

Mori gave him his first bandages when he was fourteen.

He gave him /Odasaku/.
But the two of them are too similar to ever share real affection, too sharp and cutthroat and /alienated/ to ever transform a convenient adoption into a real family.

Dazai always learned a little too well, a little too fast.

If he were an idiot, maybe Mori would have treated
him as something else than a weapon or a threat.

He wonders if, then, Mori would have seen in him something more than the ghost of the old boss.

And, if he were anyone else’s son, Dazai wonders if Mori — if anyone — would have found in him someone to love.

/He was just a kid/.
There’s little use in dwelling on the past, though. In the end, he’s just the Tsushima heir and Mori is just the surgeon who took over the Port Mafia by taking in its brat.

Mori never liked him, and he never liked Mori.

But it’s too late to mend things with him now.
Shaking his head, Dazai breaks the silence first. “Anyway. To what do I owe the displeasure?”

“Oda-kun tells me you are unwell.”

Silently, Dazai damns Odasaku. “I have it under control,” he assures, breezily.

“Do you?” A heartbeat. “So you mind if we ask your boyfriend?”
Dazai doesn’t even have the time to register the question. It punches him in the guts, leaving him silly with worry, dizzy with panic.

In the background, the alpha hears a familiar chime. A door opening.

He freezes, tries to tell himself it could be any chime in any coffeeshop.
But then—

Then Dazai hears a familiar ‘welcome,’ only a little shy of annoyed, in the background.

Akutagawa.

Dazai’s blood runs cold.

Akutagawa who is working with /Chuuya/. Chuuya, who has no idea about Mori, about the real danger of Dazai’s past.

“Don’t,” he hisses.
“A anonymous coffeeshop far away from our jurisdiction. That was smart.” Mori tuts. “But a /barista/, Dazai-kun? Your poor mother would be so disappointed in your choice.”

/Your mother/. Dazai swallows. Who cares.

She’s dead, and Chuuya is /alive/.

“Stay away from him.”
“Or /what/?”

Mori’s voice rings suave, /careless/. That tranquility that sends Dazai’s scent spiking, that makes him mad with concern.

His fangs dig in his bottom lip as he clenches his teeth, drawing blood.

There’s a rustle, then, as if Mori covered the phone to order. Just
like that, Dazai is cut out of the conversation.
But— but he can hear it.

The familiar, muffled echo of Chuuya’s voice taking the order; his mate, so close yet oblivious.

Every word opens a papercut on Dazai’s heart.

He almost forgets to breath when Chuuya /chuckles/
at something he didn’t hear.

/His omega is there, he’s *really* there/.

He’s where Dazai can’t protect him.

Every action of Mori is accurately performed to make him feel helpless and useless and—

/And it fucking worked/.

Then, as if nothing happened, Mori is back again.
To the man, intimidation is just another pastime.

/ ‘How pathetic can you be?’ /

“Chuuya-kun is the short one in a ponytail, right?” Mori says. “He’s a few meters away, he just took my order.”

/ ‘Oh, but you heard that.

I made sure you heard.’ /

“Is he ok?” Dazai wheezes.
It slips out unguarded, a glimpse of weakness that escaped his control.

Dazai seethes when Mori has the audacity chuckle.
He /knows/ violence is just a game of chess.

“That depends on you, Dazai-kun.” /For now, yes./ “Do you want to speak to him? Pick your answer carefully.”
“/No/. Just leave him alone, or I swear to god I’ll kill you.”

The violence barely trapped in his voice, rumbling like an explosion in the distance, surprises Dazai too.

He never dared talk to Mori like this before. Yet again, he never also hurt a man before Mishima.
“/Interesting/. But, now, that’s just exaggerated. Though I’m sure a few executives wouldn’t mind having a chat with Chuuya-kun.”

Dazai sneers, baring fangs even though Mori can’t see him.

“/Let them try/.”

He’ll rip apart their throats and carve out their hearts.

He will—
Mori hmms. “You know, Dazai-kun, I never thought you’d be a good boss. Your father wasn’t. But I must admit, now I find myself thinking I might have been wrong.”

“I don’t care about the organization.”

“/Don’t/ you?”

Dazai inhales. “No.”

“And what if your mate dies today?”
/He won’t/. It’s all Dazai can think of, it’s all he can focus on to keep his unhinged alpha instinct at bay.

Because his mark might not be on Chuuya’s neck, but they are in each other’s system anyway.

But meddling in Mafia business because of that vermin Mishima, and
including more people into his true name and past… that alarmed Mori. Likely, it alarmed the council.

Dazai’s rut makes him reckless and dangerous to himself, too, and Mori needs him alive. Dead, he becomes a useless pawn.

It was just a matter of time.

/Chuuya/ is—
“I have no interest in becoming boss,” he says, scanning every word to let Mori know he /might/, if he wanted to. “But you’re far too predictable too, father. After all, evil expects evil from others.” His mirthless smile cuts from cheek to cheek. “Now. Leave. My. Mate. /Alone/.”
Mori lets out a soft chuckle — the only response he has for what Dazai realizes was a /command/.

His rut deepens the connection with his instincts, but Dazai won’t blame the sudden rush of hate and power on it; he’s angry, and scared.

Turns out, being scared for his mate is way
more excruciating than being scared for his own life.

But even a unhinged young alpha can little against Mori’s influence.

The command falls flat, and Dazai knows his guardian doesn’t take offense just because they /both/ know it would have never worked.

How foolish was that?
He’s threatening Mori Ougai. /He/.
A university student, a kid compared to the mafia.

Rationally, it’s ridiculous.

He’s also fully dependent on Mori. He’s never done anything to cut this chord that links him to his guardian, because living on his own was too much of a hassle.
How is he regretting it all, now.

How does he hate this spinelessness, now.

But lifting a finger against Mori would mean pointing a gun at the Port Mafia: and Dazai would fist-fight god for Chuuya, but he’s a natural strategist — one who knows he can’t win /this/ battle.
But he can still pretend he stands a chance. He can bluff, and hope it’ll work.

“I’m impressed,” Mori drawls — sounding everything but.

“I asked nicely. It won’t happen again”.

“You /know/ you can’t command me, Dazai-kun.”

/Why don’t we test that out/, his inner alpha growls.

• • •

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More from @Blind_Blossom

10 Jan
No update because I’m still cleaning the house, but I’ve been brain rotting on some domestic ways 🐥skk say ‘I love you’ without saying it

Chuuya waking up earlier to make a bento for Dazai

Or Dazai accepting to watch on TV that movie he hates because Chuuya /loves/ it — and
even if Chuuya falls asleep halfway through he doesn’t change it

Dazai falling asleep on the couch after uni and Chuuya covering him with a blanket

OR Chuuya actually asking his mate to grab something from the highest shelf instead of climbing on chairs just to prove a pointTM
But ALSO they argue and slam doors, only to end with the slowest make-up sex and Chuuya nibbling on the bonding marks on Dazai’s chest

And Dazai chatting with all the neighbors when he and Chuuya have the first pup because he wants to know /everything/ on how to raise a kid 😭
Read 4 tweets
8 Jan
🐥 skk being apart because Chuuya has to visit his uncles in Paris.

Once they see each other at the airport a month later, Dazai holds onto Chuuya /so/ tight, unable to let go, nose buried in his mate’s hair.

It’s the longest hug and they can’t break it even if ppl are sharing
These two are the kind of couple who can’t stop kissing/hugging/staring because they just feel too /at home/ in each other’s arms and I’m not ok
When Chuuya uneasily tries to pull away — not because he wants to, but because they have been hugging for ten minutes now — Dazai pulls him even closer, touches his lips to the mark on his neck and murmurs:

“Just one more minute. I’ve missed you.”

Chuuya literally /thaws/ 😭
Read 6 tweets
6 Jan
Ok but this is exactly my jam???

SKK a/b/o royalty where there was… well, if not love, at least attraction in the beginning.

They were young and rakish. Chuuya was a handsome lordling and prince Dazai wanted him. Nobody but him.

He moved mountains and kings to marry Chuuya. ImageImageImage
But years pass, the couple doesn’t have heirs and the marriage turns into something Chuuya never imagined: a mistake.

A love that bloomed in spring, lasted a summer, and withered with the first snow.

Clearly, Dazai’s coldness doesn’t do well with Chuuya’s impetuous temperament.
Chuuya has the confirmation of it when Dazai’s attention starts wandering to other omegas.

The free lordling turned heartsick prince /won’t/ have it.
He can’t deal with the rumors, with infidelity.

But, even though thoughts hurt Chuuya’s pride all the same, Dazai is not acting.
Read 8 tweets
29 Dec 21
Omegaverse SKK AU where Chuuya is selected as the surrogate for the child of prestigious Mori Corp CEO Dazai Osamu and his wife, Michiko.

CW // mpreg

Michiko is enthusiastic about the pregnancy, and insists that Chuuya temporarily moves in with them. To be fair, Chuuya
doesn’t really mind — Dazai’s house is huge, and he can have a /driver/ to the pre-school where he works. A damn driver. It’s like living in a fairytale.

The first weeks go smoothly.

Dazai is a pain in the ass and an obnoxious asshole, but Michiko isn’t bad at all.
It’s fine.
Until Chuuya starts to notice little odd things.

Michiko /doesn’t/ want this baby.

She doesn’t even want her husband. She sure as hell pities Chuuya.

All she wanted was to live up to the peer pressure of being an accomplished upper-class wife with a good husband and a child.
Read 11 tweets
9 Dec 21
Ok but listen. AU where Soulmates can communicate telepathically.

Cut to Soukoku: the most devastating partnership the mafia ever had.

An understanding so complete that also comes from the fact that— well, they /do/ hear each other thoughts.

They /have/ a deeper connection.
Nobody knows it because they always refused to address their unwanted connection, but—

but /they/ know.

They both try to ignore their link after Dazai defects. Sometimes they still talk, sometimes they argue.

Chuuya does his best to respect Dazai’s mourning, to keep out of the
brunet’s head while he remembers his best friend.

And then, on some nights, Chuuya gets /really/ drunk and angry.

Dazai ignores him, letting the redhead shout into the void while he rolls on the side and tries to focus on the pillow under him and not on the voice in his head.
Read 7 tweets
1 Dec 21
Thinking of Paper Rings SKK taking a six-months Europe rail trip so Dazai can find inspiration for his new novel

They land in Paris first, have a big fight in Prague (Dazai runs after Chuuya under the rain on Charles Bridge) and Chuuya proposes first in Saint Petersburg 🥲
(Dazai had planned the same proposal for when they got back to Yokohama, and that’s how he knows /this/ time is the right one).

Of course, it’s not always all good.

They miss a lot of trains. Sometimes they get lost. Chuuya tries to speak Spanish and they end up with a weird
and non-alcoholic drink that is not even remotely Agua de Valencia (look, he /tried/!).

At some point, Dazai is /so/ frustrated with his work that he threatens to take the first flight back to Japan.

But, for every explosive fight they have there’s twice as heated make up sex.
Read 4 tweets

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