Monday
Haruka arrived at her room several minutes after leaving Haku. Her head was clutched in her hand and focused upon the ground. It took her a few tries to get the door open, and once she did, she half wished she hadn't. For, directly on the other side of the door as if she had just been about to leave, was one annoyed looking Mai.
"Haruka! Wh-where've you been?" She cried out, her voice steeped in worry and irritation. Haruka looked up into the woman's eye blankly, her hand still pressed against her face.
"Falling...laughing...koi ponds...uhn...Headache..." Haruka muttered as she tried to walk around Mai and into the room. The younger woman wouldn't have it, however.
"Koi ponds? Haruka what are talking about?" Mai said with a frown and grabbed Haruka by the shoulder. Haruka just moaned. She was in too much pain to go through an interrogation, so she merely made a drinking motion with her hand, shrugged Mai off her shoulder, and ambled into the bathroom to shower.
She was cold. A carelessly discarded towel wasn't going to prevent very much, especially since Haruka hadn't cared to do much with it after its reception. The woman stared into the bathroom mirror upon arriving in the room. Her clothes still hung rather damply on her body, and her hair dangled limply around her upper body in damp clumps. Her shoulders were slumped forward; she looked as much of a wreck as she felt. With a sigh that disrupted the strands of hair that had fallen into her face, Haruka turned to turn on the shower.
'What was I thinking...wait, was I thinking?'
-~-
The journey to the cafeteria seemed longer than usual, as it was accompanied by a pounding headache that refused to subside. 'Today, godammit. Today I'm finally going to eat alone, ' Haruka thought darkly as she arrived at the front of the line for food. With a quick glance at the various breakfast items laid out for the students, Haruka realized that the thought of food was thoroughly unpleasant. Instead, she poured herself a generous cup of piping hot, oolong tea and turned to find a table. An empty table.
And it was that morning that Haruka finally achieved her goal. Off in the corner of the cafeteria was an uninhabited table. With a small smile, Haruka made her way over to it and took a seat. 'Ah...finally, some peace and quiet.' She took a rather sizable sip of oolong, and then rested her elbow on the table and her head upon her palm. She didn't remember much about the night before, only that she and Haku had drank a considerable amount of Awamori and that she had somehow ended up in a koi pond. And, she thought, she probably only remembered the latter bit due to her undeniable dampness the following morning. 'Why did I even sit down with him? He's my prey...I'm supposed to be trying to make his life miserable. If I'm not careful, we might become drinking buddies,' Haruka made a sour face at the thought as she picked her cup up once again, and who knows what could happen.' Her mind lingered on that thought for several moments before her eyes widened and she choked on the tea she had just allowed to slide into her mouth. 'I need to be more careful...'
Haruka finished her tea and stood up. She had thought that perhaps the pleasing aroma of the oolong would help to alleviate her headache, but she had no such luck. No one had come to bother her this morning. Looking around the cafeteria she did see several people she knew, but none of them seemed to notice her presence. 'Ah well, I'd rather just hole myself up in a nice, dark room and sleep, anyways...' It was then that Haruka really noticed the noise. The mindless chattering of hundreds of students had been prodding the back of her mind the whole time she had been in the cafeteria, but she had done her best to block it out. Now that she had nothing to distract herself from it, however, the noise was overwhelming. Haruka visibly flinched as the din permeated her ears and mind. She decided that it'd be best to wait the rest of the morning break in the silence of a courtyard...just not one with koi ponds.
-~-
Hand to hand was the first class of the day. Haruka entered it silently, and cringed as the noise level in the room worsened her throbbing head. Classes today were not going to be pleasant. She took a quick glance around the room and found that...there were new people around. 'Of course. These must be the hopefuls that passed on the second week of basic training...'
The students were told to line up so that Hikyou-sensei could see them. Haruka ended up next to a black haired, blue eyed student that she hadn't seen at all last week; she figured she must be one of the new students.
"Welcome back to a new week, class B," Hikyou-sensei started. "And, to those you you entering this class for the first time, I welcome you. Now, for today's lesson. Today, you are going to practice various forms of blocks on each other."
"How simple can you get?" scoffed the new girl next to Haruka.
"What is your name, woman?"
"Mahonna Kuiki."
"Well, Mahonna, that is your opinion. And I think you may be disappointed with how much weight the opinion of someone who has not even been a student for a day holds. Besides, I could be teaching you how to correctly form a punch. Would you like that better?"
Mahonna just glared at the teacher.
"Good. Now, partner up."
Haruka had to admit that she was slightly shocked. What an arrogant woman, to try and stand up to the teacher on her first day like that. But wait...Mahonna Kuiki? Haruka's eyes narrowed as she tried to remember where she had heard that name before. And slowly, the memory of the night before worked its way to the surface of her throbbing head and revealed to her...the awful noise of some traditional japanese instrument.
"Mahonna Kuiki," Haruka growled out loud, and turned to the woman who had not yet moved to find a partner.
"What?" the blue eyed woman responded, but she sounded uninterested.
The throbbing in Haruka's head increased with each remembered note of that instrument.
"You're the one who has that...kokyu."
"What of it?" she snapped.
"It sounds...horrible."
"Why thank you. Now, may I go find a partner?" Mahonna began to scan the room past Haruka's head.
She should've stopped there and never approached Mahonna again. But Haruka didn't like this woman. No, she didn't like her one bit.
"No," Haruka said forcefully. "No, I think you better stay right here." And the jarring notes of the kokyu continued within Haruka's mind. They grew in strength in volume, and Haruka wanted desperately to snuff them out. She scowled at the arrogant woman in front of her. This addition to her headache was her fault. All her fault...
"Well then, I suppose you might want to block," Mahonna spat, and swung.
-~-
The rest of the day passed relatively uneventfully, though the pain in Haruka's head did not give her solace until right around dinner time. The woman hadn't eaten anything all day, and although she was quite hungry, she was able to fall asleep quite easily.
Another day was done.
Friday
The morning started just as any other. Haruka awoke, showered, and dressed to ready herself for the long day. But something felt different, off somehow. She paused in her morning rituals. For some reason she just...didn't feel up to going anywhere.
"Haruka?" Mai asked as Haruka stood in the middle of their room, motionless.
"It's...it's nothing. You go on ahead without me, Mai. I'll see you in class."
"You sure?"
"Mm." Haruka replied, though she was certain she didn't sound convincing.
"If you say so..." And with that Mai exited the room.
Haruka walked over to her bed and sat down on the edge. The room was so familiar now. Even with her eyes closed, Haruka knew every inch of it. Across from her sat Mai and Junko's bunk bed. Junko's bunk was unmade with several items haphazardly strewn across the bottom, and Mai's was meticulously neat. Haruka sighed and lay down diagonally across her bed. If she stayed here for too long she'd be late for classes, she knew, but at the moment she didn't really mind.
"Classes..." she whispered out loud. "What am I doing here, anyway?" It wasn't that Haruka disliked the Academy. It opened the gates to a whole new world. But...she didn't have a concrete reason to be there. Satine had talked her into going for the sheer pleasure of it; neither woman had really realized what they had gotten themselves into. That was made painfully apparent by the fact that Satine had left, without even a word to Haruka.
So now here she was, lying on her bunk, staring up at the mattress above her. She could blame her arriving here on Satine all she wanted, but even when her friend had left, Haruka had stayed. And it wasn't as if the Academy was easy on her. No, not a day went by where the thought of giving up didn't pass through Haruka's mind. But she never did.
'Is it the people I've met here? Mai, Shino, Mugen, Haku, and all the others? Is it them that keeps me here? I didn't have friends when I was alive. Satine was it. But here...all those people I knew but never let get close to me...we have a second chance. And then there's those like Mai and Shino that I'm meeting for the first time. '
Wasn't it funny then, that Satine had left? She had lost her only friend, and yet found the opportunity to gain so many more. But was this what she wanted? After living in seclusion for twenty-four years, opening up wasn't exactly something you could just dive into. People had already started breaking down her barriers against her will, but...
'But? But what? It's going to happen whether I'm conscious of it or not.'
With a yawn, Haruka sat up and readied herself to leave the room. She had her hand on the door when she once again lost her will to leave. "Screw classes. I won't be able to focus today." Haruka ventured back towards her dresser, pulled out a normal kimono, and proceeded to replace her school uniform with it. The kimono was black with crimson trimming and suited Haruka much more than the red and white she had just been wearing. She then took her hair out of its usual pigtails and quickly ran a comb through it. She was ready for a trip into Rukongai.
Haruka left her room and began to wander toward the entrance of the Academy. There were barely any students in the hallways. 'Class must've already started...I do wonder what they'll do to me when they realize I've cut. ' But at this point, Haruka didn't really care. She needed a break, time away from all the suffocating white and confusing hallways. All the shinigami there, they had a reason to stick around. They had a driving force that kept them going from day to day. But what did Haruka have? A friend's summer whim, that had forced her into an entirely new world. But what sort of reason was that?
There was no one in the entryway when Haruka arrived, so she was able to slip out quickly and quietly. And, as soon as the door was closed behind her and Haruka was in Rukongai once again, she was reminded of how different this world was. The sounds, the smells, the colors, everything was different. From the top of the stairs leading up to the Academy, Haruka was able to hear the excited chattering of young children and the booming voices of merchants. A gust of cool wind let her smell the goods out on carts in the streets. And, looking down, she was able to see the town, with its plain looking buildings. No one had a wonderful life here in Rukongai, but somehow they still managed to be optimistic.
She started to walk down the stairs, slowly, with a small smile on her face as the wind played with her long hair. It was then that she saw the figure at the foot of the steps. He just sat there, and stared off into the distance, his back against the sides of the steps. Haruka recognized him immediately, and groaned. Who couldn't know that silver hair? 'What's he doing out here? I was supposed to be trying to escape from academy life for a day...' But there was no avoiding it. Once he had seen her, she couldn't just ignore him. Well, she could, but he had her curious.
"Haku?" She asked, and used his real name so that he'd know right away who she was. Haku didn't respond for a moment, but quickly twisted his head around to face Haruka when he did.
"Haruka," he said pleasantly, but his voice sounded distant.
"Mm."
"What brings you out to Rukongai, today?" he asked in the same manner and turned his head back to its previous position.
"Searching, I guess you could say," she replied, and began to stare at the same point the the distance that he seemed to be. "What about you, Haku? And don't tell me you're just out to pass the morning."
"Just going over my old stomping ground one last time. And, I'd much prefer it if you called me Kuishi, if you would."
"I have no reason to. Give me one, and I'll consider it."
“Excellent.” Haku said, smiling appreciatively. “That would’ve taken a normal person several sentences and you did it in two.”
“Well?” Haruka insisted, undeterred.
“I used to live out here, you know,” Haku said, motioning for her to have a seat. She did so, but stared intently with an expression that needed an answer. “There are no easy answers.” Haku began.
“Especially for such straightforward questions?” Haruka prompted. Haku chuckled good-humoredly.
“Touché.” He admitted. He seemed nonchalant, but Haruka could see a hint of frustration around Haku’s make-up covered eyes. He got up and stretched lazily, then tilted his head back to look at her, smiling as if to say: “Are you coming?” He walked away far out into the streets. After getting so far, he looked back and saw Haruka still at his elbow. He smiled. “I changed my name because Haku Ishikawa was reported murdered little more than two weeks ago.” He looked back again, Haruka guessed so that he could see some look of puzzlement. But she stared at him, patiently. He said nothing, but his eyes were bright and calm. The two walked quite a ways. Haku saw the same tavern he had met the judge. They passed the same streets he walked over.
“Where are you going?” Haruka asked.
“I am going to a place from my past. Once there, I’ll answer your questions.” Haruka nodded to herself. Haku indicated a cluster of rundown buildings.
“I was raised there from age fifteen.” He said. “Back when it was an orphanarium. Me and my sister.”
“You have a sister?” Haruka asked.
“Not my real sister.” Haku admitted. “She died long ago. My adopted sister, Akane Makishima.” Haruka didn’t persist about Haku’s real sister. Mentioning that she had died, Haku must’ve meant that he either didn’t know where she was…or that she wasn’t anywhere.
It was a few minutes more of walking before a cry was heard. A man, swarthy and stocky with short black hair that stood at attention, was pointing angrily at Haku. Haku saw him and seemed to regard him with disinterest. But the man was not to be ignored.
“Do you know how long I’ve thought of this?” He yelled, his eyes cross.
“Really? You haven’t crossed my mind once, Mikio.” Haku admitted, coldly. “Surely you aren’t going to cause any trouble.” Haku said, glaring sharply. Haruka had never seen Haku glare quite like this, it wasn’t a very comfortable thing to see on a face that was usually so pleasant and content.
“You cause trouble! That’s all you’ll ever be!” Mikio cried. At this, Haku stopped and turned to Haruka. His face seemed to be one of embarrassment and apology.
“Excuse me for just a minute.” Haku said, smiling goofily. Haruka watched him follow the man into one of the castigated alleys that were so common in the slums. He moved lightly, with a certain cheer and purpose. It didn’t take long, within two minutes Haku returned, smiling pleasantly again.
“They really love you here.” Haruka shot at him. Haku laughed amiably and motioned for the both of them to continue their walk.
“This place is a flea-infested freak show.” He said, scratching his ear. Haruka couldn’t help notice a darkish stain on the black cuff of his Uwagii. Haku also seemed to think he had fooled Haruka into not noticing the object that had been stuffed into his Uwagii pocket, but she quickly pointed it out. It was a round package wrapped in brown paper, a corner of which was sticking slightly out of the pocket.
“What’s that?” She asked, suspiciously. Haku laughed again and scratched his head.
“A souvenir. Something my adopted sister always wanted, turned out I wanted it even more.” Haku said, giving her a stare saying that was all he would say over the subject.
Having come closer to the buildings, he motioned to one in particular. It was a battered old place that was missing a large section of wall off it’s second floor. Really, the building had probably looked much more like a building ten years ago.
“Why were you reported murdered?” Haruka persisted. Haku smiled, patiently.
“You’re so determined to know all my dark secrets?” He asked, lifting an eyebrow and laughing.
“When I show up ten years from now with a fake name, you’ll know how I feel,” she replied, coldly. Haruka had noticed how much he had consistently changed the topic whenever the subject of his name had come up, but he didn’t this time.
“I was reported murdered because I blackmailed a Rukongai holding judge to,” he said simply. Haruka was more and more curious, it was a mess of questions that didn’t seem to get any clearer with each answer.
“You arranged reports of your own murder?” She asked.
“Yes. To incriminate the man you just saw, Mikio Goto.” He said, courageously pushing the door wide on the building and walking into it. Haruka walked inside, following. The place was an ocean of dust and neglect. Shattered glass and collapsed ceiling, dripping with water. “Goto had been my sister’s…Akane’s…special friend. One night he punched her in the face; add that to all the times he had tormented me and had rallied the whole district against me and I was at the end of my tether.” Haku pointed up the decrepit stairs, which even he took his time and care to climb. “You see, everyone,” he called down the stairs at Haruka, “has their breaking point. People who torture professionally, know this. Lots of them use it to get information, but the not-so-wise ones…well, torturing someone you can’t control is dangerous.” He said, looking back meaningfully at Haruka. She decided to let it pass.
The second floor was one large uninterrupted room, totally empty except for two futons rolled up on the floor. The wall facing the district had collapsed, leaving a perfect view of all the rooftops of the twelfth southern district of the Rukongai. Haruka began to wonder what Haku planned to do here, but she soon found her answer. Haku stooped, prying one of the floorboards up with his fingers. Haruka wondered if removing floorboards was such a good idea, considering the state of the building. He reached in the hole and extracted four bottles. Haruka could see the labels. Two of them were Awamori, the other two were decanters, she supposed of Cranberry and Pomegranate juice.
“How could you live here and afford all that?” She asked. Haku laughed deeply.
“I didn’t say I could.” He smiled at her and held the bottles up for her to see. “Would you care for a drink?”
"A..." Haruka pondered a moment. It was a simple question. She could refuse, and things would probably go just fine. However, she could always accept and force herself into a world of unknown endeavors; no one knew quite what they were going to do once they had allowed themselves to become intoxicated. But it wasn't as if it would be the first time...
"Sure," she decided to respond with. Haku then poured a generous amount of Awamori and cranberry juice into a cup and handed it to her. With a look around at the dilapidated room, Haruka decided that the floor wouldn't be an entirely suitable place to sit down on. She stared semi-intently at the futons for a while, but part of her gaze was also on Haku, who was now mixing his own drink. He didn't notice her glances. "So uhm, am I supposed to sit on the floor?" she finally decided to say.
Haku took a moment to look around the room himself, and frowned at its sorry state as if noticing it for the first time. "Those futons..." he said, and gestured to them with one hand as he brought his cup up to his mouth with the other, "we'll sit on those." He finished with a swig of the Awamori. Haruka didn't move. She just looked at Haku expectantly, as if to say, "And I'm supposed to roll them out?" He stood there for a moment before giving her an awkward smile.
"Would you mind holding my drink? I'll roll them out for us." Haruka just nodded and held her hand out for the cup. Haku complied by placing it in her hand. Looking at it, she couldn't help but notice how much its aroma differed from hers. She hadn't had a lot of experience with pomegranate. In fact, she couldn't exactly recall the taste at the moment, but she did remember that she hadn't hated it she just...liked cranberry...
"Ok, there," Haku said, disrupting her thoughts. She looked up and saw that he had rolled out one of the futons. One of the futons. She scowled at the close proximity they would be forced to sit in, but walked over and gave Haku his drink back, nonetheless. He took a seat at the head of the futon, and she near the end. Upon sitting down, Haruka took a drink of her Awamori, and sighed as she did so.
"So basically...your sister was with this...Mikio guy, he was an ass, you put him in his place and made it looked like you had been killed...by him?" Haruka said, and looked over at him.
"More or less," Haku replied, and he took another swig of the Awamori.
"So then...why Kuishi Sato?" Haku didn't respond. "You told me you'd..."
"My sister called me it," he said before she could finish. He stared at his cup for a moment, and upon realizing it was empty, went to get himself more. He also carried all of their...materials over to the futon so that they could be easily reached and poured himself a cup of straight Awamori. Haruka's cup was only half empty. "She always called me Kuishi, see. Sato...it was my mother's maiden name." He took a long gulp from his cup.
Haruka didn't say anything, at first. She just took another sip of her drink. "So then...what would happen if someone found you out?"
"Oh," Haku said, and finished his second cup. "Something bad to be sure. Did you want another?" Haruka shook her head, and spun the liquid in her cup to indicate that she still had some left.
"Well aren't you vague," she sighed, and drained the rest of her cup. She stared into the empty container for a minute, as if the universe's secret lay at the bottom. Then she reached for the bottle of Awamori and filled her cup back up to the top. "Kanpai,*" She said, and chugged it. 'Well hey, if he wants to get drunk might as well not waste time. I have what I need now...but that doesn't mean it'll change anything. There's no reason for him to know that, though.' She let the cup part from her lips, and a small smirk spread across her face as she did so.
Time began to pass quickly as Haku and Haruka drained their supply of liquor. Haruka's sense of judgement was long gone, but some little part of her wondered what she was thinking, getting herself into this.
"Haku..." she said, as thoughtfully as one could get in such a state, "why are you all the way over there?"
"Because...I sat down here and you sat down there...it's an easy fix, though," he said, and his speech was so slurred that he could barely be understood. But Haruka decided she didn't want to stay seated. She stood up, and staggered over to the destroyed wall.
"Nice view over here," she chuckled and leaned over the remains of the wall to look down at the street. A a young woman and her daughter were walking by the house. "Konnichiwaaa!" she screamed through a giggle. The woman looked up at Haruka, startled, and then shot her a dark glare while she grabbed her daughter's hand and sped up. "Well they're no fun..." Haruka commented, and turned around. However, she was met by Haku's chest, and let out a startled squeal. Then she laughed. "What...don't sneak up on me like that, seriously!"
"Sorry," Haku replied, and walked over to their 'window.' "Not bad," he commented, and leaned over the edge much in the same fashion that Haruka had. But, having had just that much more to drink, he was just that much more intoxicated than she was. And, his already precarious situation got a whole lot worse. Haruka watched as Haku leaned just a little too far, and his balance was shot completely to hell. His arms flailed as he let out a sort of strangled "whoah!" sound. Haruka reacted almost automatically and grabbed him by the arm to pull him back into the room. He fell backward onto the floor, and Haruka, who had also lost her balance at that point, fell next to him. The two laughed harder than any random passerby could have probably thought possible.
"So like...you do this often, then?" Haruka asked as she stared at the filthy looking ceiling.
"When the situation...calls for it."
"And that means?"
"You like questions, don't you."
Haruka laughed at that, and rolled onto her side to face him. "When the situation...calls for it."
With that said, she got up off of the floor and staggered over to one of the intact walls to lean against it. "You know," she said with a sort of detached look on her face, "I've always thought life was stupid. When I died, it didn't change anything. I didn't even leave anyone to miss me behind." She giggled, as if something like that was a perfectly normal statement. "My brother always used to say to me 'Your existence lasts as long as there is someone to remember you by. What makes you immortal is not eternal life. While some fear the end of their life, I merely fear the end of my existence.' I don't think I really ever knew what he meant by that." She paused again, to see Haku's reaction. He was just lying where she had left him, his eyes fixed upon the ceiling. "He...he was a pretty smart guy. If there was someone who was going to immortalize me, it would be him. But he...and then I let him down. After my death...well, there weren't a lot of people left to remember us by. He was liked by all, but he was just one of those people that...didn't try to be loved." Haruka looked at the ground then, not fully sure if she had really said that or not. A thick silence fell then that Haruka's half functioning mind tried desperately to break.
But, of course, like a horribly overused plot device, Haku broke it instead. "You have to fight for such an immortality." He smirked and stood.
"He wasn't like that though. He just...wanted to be friends with the world."
"Then maybe he didn't really want to be immortal, either," Haku said. "Or maybe he didn't see the end of both your lives as the end of your existences, like you seem to."
"Hm...maybe." She smiled. "After all...I guess I am still around."
"You are." Haku said, but he sounded almost sour.
"Hey! Well sorry for existing." Haruka said with a smile.
Haku didn't respond to her. He merely walked back over to the futon and plopped down upon it.
"Don't go to sleep!" she laughed, and walked over to stand above him.
"Is there any more...?" he said with a half smile on his face. Haruka looked around for the bottle of Awamori. There was was a little less than a quarter of a bottle left. She stumbled over and picked it up. Not bothering with a cup, Haku reached up and grabbed the bottle from Haruka's hand and started gulping it. Haruka let out a strange, little noise of amused surprise and then grabbed the bottle back from him.
"Don't hog it..." she mumbled, and then finished off the bottle. Haku laughed.
"Out of the same bottle..." And then he laughed again. Haruka looked suspiciously down at the bottle of Awamori with a frown.
"What's wrong with it?" She said, scrutinizing it. But Haku only laughed a third time, and Haruka was left to wonder what he could've meant. Giving up, she tossed the bottle off into a corner of the room. Then she sat down next to him.
"I miss my brother." She said abruptly. All the talk of siblings had subconsciously driven her to the point where she could no longer hold that fact hidden away in the back of her mind.
"I think we all have something we miss," Haku said, and he propped himself up rather unceremoniously on his elbows.
Haruka chuckled. "He raised me, you know...but I haven't seen him in..." she trailed off then as if trying to figure out how long it had been. "A long time."
"I haven't seen my real sister in a long time, either..." Haku said strangely. "She was eaten by hollows you know." He chuckled at that a little.
Haruka frowned. "Well, my brother was killed by a human."
"And that's worse?" Haku asked with a raised eyebrow.
"Much worse." Haruka nodded confidently.
Haku didn't say anything after that.
"Your hair..." she whispered, as if she desperately needed to get her next revelation off her back.
"What about it?"
"It reminds me of someone."
"Who's that, pray tell?" Haku said and blinked at her.
"Yamashi Akira. He killed my parents. Somehow...I think he killed my brother, too. But he had white hair."
"So I remind you of him?"
"Your hair does." She leaned in so that her face was right up against his. His breath still had a faint hint of pomegranate to it. "But you're not so bad...in comparison to him."
"Oh...what should I make of that?"
"Whatever you want to..." And she pulled away with a grin. "Hey...let's do something! Let's...dance!" And she jumped up with a giggle.
"Da...how much did you drink?" Haku mumbled, but he stood up himself...rather shakily.
"Oh c'mon...it'll be fun!" Haruka laughed as she began to spin around in clumsy circles. Haku just stood there for a moment, before taking her arm and complying. It was a clumsy dance to no sort of beat in particular, and feet were constantly tripped over. But they only laughed each time. It was several minutes later that Haku tried to spin Haruka around. However, Haruka only ended up falling into another fit of giggles and tripping. She fell backward onto the futon, and took Haku with her as she did so.
This put them in an awkward position. Haku was lying directly on top of Haruka, his head only inches away from hers. He started to chuckle, and then tried to push himself upward and off of her. But Haruka still had her hand in his from the dancing, and she didn't let go. His lips just looked...so inviting. So, she pressed hers against his, just to see what would happen. He tasted, faintly, like pomegranate. Haruka giggled, and pulled away. But Haku didn't try to get up after that. He just stared at her strangely, as if he wasn't quite sure what was supposed to happen next. But, neither was she. All she could think of is leaning back in...she wanted that pomegranate again. It had nothing on cranberry, but it was unfamiliar, it was...The alcohol had more than taken over. But Haruka didn't know what else to do, so she leaned again. She pressed herself against Haku in a strangely desperate kiss.
And it continued. They started with just that simple kiss, but that kiss became something more. It became an act of passion neither one knew they possessed. And that passion grew in power. They forced themselves closer to each other, desperately grabbing at the other just to stay as close as possible. Haruka didn't even realize when her kimono began to fall away, and she was no longer covered, nor did she think about what was happening when Haku's attire also came off, and she was suddenly granted access to his chest as well as his face, his neck, his lips. There were no thoughts, there was no half-collapsed room, there was only them. The two of them, trying desperately to become one.
And Haruka didn't know it at that point of time, in fact it would be a long time before she did, but becoming a shinigami was no longer just a summer whim.
*Cheers!
NOTE: "Friday" cowritten by and Sinister and myself.
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