Chapter 1
Notes:
after writing a few smaller fics I figured it was time to graduate to smth a lil longer!
this is the first time i've written something so long⦠so bear with me!
also, sorry Luna haters but i lowkey think heās just a chill guy (despite being an asshole like any of the arrogant world-class strikers) so heās nice in my fic.
to me, Saeās change-of-heart in Spain is more because of his own mental struggles than it is any bullying.
dont think too much about what language theyre speaking unless its specifically mentioned haha š
anyways, iāll stop yapping now.
thanks for reading!! :)
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
The entire pitch went silent as Rin Itoshiās foot connected with the ball. It curved almost perfectly, soaring elegantly through the air, and made contact with the net decisively.
Swish.
Saeās eyes raised to the scoreboard, now reading 2-2.
The clock ticked down, 3 seconds left, 2 seconds left, 1 second left, zero. A whistle blew, signaling the end of the match.
Every player on the pitch seemed to exhale as one, some shocked and some elated. Except for Sae. He stared passively at the score, hand settling on his hip.
PXG had managed to tie against Re Al.
The crowd broke from their silent awe, the roaring of their cheers filling the air. The ground trembled with the intensity of their fervor. Cheers of āRin! Rin! Rin!ā filled the air desperately, as if his name were the only cheer worthy of such a beautiful goal.
Even Spainās fans seemed impressed rather than disappointed at the tie. Some even shouted āITOSHI!!ā like they werenāt sure if they should be cheering for Sae or Rinā their beloved midfielder or the upstart striker on the opposing team.
The match had, after all, been an intense explosion of talentā one of the only reasons Sae was still basking in the echo of the whistle instead of making his way to the locker room immediately.
In a burst of motion, PXG was swarming Rin, who stood stock-still in the aftermath of his show-stopping goal. Shidouās pink-tipped hair glowed in the stadium lights as he aggressively threw himself towards the other striker. Sae could hear his boisterous laughter join in with the childish sound of Charlesā joy. Even Loki was smiling, patting Rin on the back like a proud parent. Rinās eyes, though, remained trained on Sae, his body rigid.
As if he were demanding from across the pitch that Sae look at him.
The realization had Sae turning his back to his brother indifferently, expression hardening into something resembling disappointment.
Had Rin ever listened to him?
Sae thought heād been clear in declaring that their promiseā naive, childishā would only hold Rin back. That he needed to break away from it, evolve his own relationship with soccer, something that wasnāt built upon being like his nii-chan. He had thought that telling Rin once would be enough, but it hadnāt. So heād told him again, at the U-20 match, that to become the best, he had to stop acting like his little brother.
Yet, Rin still turned to him for a reasonā a reason to play, a reason to evolve, a reason to become number one. It was foolish. It would ruin him.
So Sae turned away, though he felt Rinās gaze burn into his back, demandingā look at me, Sae, look at me!ā and faced his team.
Lunaās eyes met his, sharp and observant, an eyebrow raising in question, āSomething wrong?ā
He let out a noncommittal hum in response; Luna pried too much for his own good, his questions were unworthy of a reply.
The master striker was unbothered, and merely laughed at the half-response, āAlright, genius.ā
Slowly, they began to file back to the locker rooms. The gentle chatter of his teammates was barely audible over the hum of the crowdā still loud in the stands, riding the high of the match along with the players.
As they entered the shade of the facility, Sae absently tugged at his jersey, which had started to cool against his sweaty skin, sticking to it unpleasantly. He needed a shower.
āSo, Saeā¦ā Lunaās voice cut through his peace once again, āYou gonna party with us, later?ā
āA party?ā Sae asked, rather than answering. Heād been around Luna long enough for the man to know that he didnāt mean is there a party? but rather, a party for what?
āTo celebrate such a historic tie, of course!ā The strikerās green eyes flashed with something mischievous, āPXG will be there, too.ā
As if that would pique Saeās interest in the slightest. He scoffed as he reached for his locker, fingers brushing against the handle. Only for Luna to step in front of him, knocking his arm aside, an infernal smirk plastered on his face.
āNow, now. Ignoring people is rude, Sae. Are you coming to the party, or not?ā Luna asked, though the tone was hardly questioning, edging much closer to demanding. As if he were trying to get it into Saeās head that he was, in fact, coming to the party.
Which he would not be doing. He was going to take a shower, then leave. As always.
āMove.ā Sae snapped. He resisted the urge to simply shove Luna out of the way. Their teammates buzzed like flies in the background, chattering aimlessly while remaining blissfully unaware of the situation at hand.
Luna doubled down, leaning his weight against the locker, āSay youāll go.ā He said the words with the same tone heād used with Sae since heād been bumped up to Re Alās official teamā the lilting tone an older brother might take with his younger sibling.
āI wonāt.ā He reached for the lockerās handle again, but Luna didnāt move out of his way. āNow move.ā
Lunaās eyes narrowed playfully, āCome to the party, Sae.ā He leaned his head against the locker, mock-resting, eyebrows raising comically as if to say I could do this all day.
Saeās eye twitched, his skin crawling from dried sweat and the filthy jersey still plastered to his backā things that would have been remedied by now had Luna minded his own business.
He sighed, eyelids fluttering shut as he weighed the pros and cons of continuing to protest or giving in. Luna was most likely not going to move until he heard what he wantedā that is, Saeās agreementā and Sae didnāt want to stand around in his dirty kit any longer.
So, he took a deep breath and acquiesced, āFine. Now move.ā
The Spaniardās face split open in a wide smile, hand coming down to swiftly pat Saeās shoulder before it could be swatted away, āSee you there, then.ā
As Luna walked away, Sae was left with the feeling that heād just made one of the worst decisions of his life.
ā¦
Sae blinked back tears as he downed another shot, the cheers of his mediocre teammates hardly audible over the sound of his heart in his ears. The oddly-colored liquor burned as it slid down his throat, only adding to the haziness in his head. If there was anything he was grateful for now, it was the tolerance heād built to alcohol during his time in Spain. A night like this would've knocked him out already had he not been able to hold his liquor. As he was, it still managed to fill his brain with a thick, soupy kind of fog.
The barās music shook the room, a lively flamenco beat that filled the air with passion and set a rhythm for dance. It wasnāt even that late and the bar was already packed with sweaty, drunk bodies swaying to the music.
Sae reached for his beerā which might not have been his, but at this point heād forgotten to careā and took a sip.
He wasnāt an avid fan of alcohol; he simply found himself with nothing better to do at a party than drink. He wasnāt there to talk, after all, orā he shuddered at the thoughtā dance.
āSteady there, Genius,ā A bracing hand clapped him on the shoulder, stopping the tilting of his body that he hadnāt even realized was happening. Now that it had been corrected, though, he felt like the world had lost its axis. His knees trembled, his hip bumping into the barās counter painfully.
Yet when Sae looked up and saw blonde hair and bright-colored eyes, he didnāt hesitate to sneer. He snapped a quick āHands off,ā towards what mustāve been Luna, regardless of the fact that the manās hand was the only thing keeping him from fallingā and subsequently catching himself gracelesslyā on the bar.
āAwww, thatās no way to talk to your favorite striker, Sae-chan! You wound me.ā The hand on his shoulder tightened, almost concerned. If a hand could show concern.
āYou,ā Sae blinked, struggling to focus on the face of the blond-haired man through the half-light of the bar. Heād been wrong in assuming it was Luna who had steadied him. He leaned in closeā close enough to smell alcohol on the manās breathā and caught sight of tanned skin and bubblegum eyes. It was surprising, but not because of who it wasā after all, there was only one person who dared to call him that nickname.
āMe!ā Shidou Ryusei declared, way too chipper for his own good, teeth flashing brightly. From that action alone, he managed to give Sae a headache. It seemed that Shidou hadnāt changed much, even after Blue Lockās end. āSo, whatās crackinā?ā
āOff,ā Sae insisted, instead of answering. His head was hurting and he was honestly having trouble understanding what response was appropriate to āwhatās crackinā. The beer in his hand sloshed, stray droplets pattering on the ground, as he pushed at Shidou with no success. More than a little frustratedā did the demon not understand basic commands, anymore?ā Sae added a conditional āNow!ā to his demand.
āJeez, okay, sorry,ā Shidou said, sounding far from apologetic and very close to amused.
The offending hand lifted from its stabilizing position. If heād been sober, Sae would've been embarrassed by the way it sent him careening into the barās counter. The way he was now, he simply pushed himself back to standing and frowned at the loss of a precious few drops of his drink.
Unbidden, a quiet, āRude,ā escaped his lips.
āWow,ā Shidou chuckled, breath tickling Saeās face as he inspected the midfielder with a mischievous smile, āNever took you for the life of the party.ā Sae didnāt respond, but the demon didnāt seem too botheredā he had never particularly cared if anyone responded to him, anyways.
āSo, that was a great match, huh? Rinrin really tied it up nicely. Haha! Tied it up! Get it? I know you do!ā Shidou laughed, unrestrained, as if there was pure joy instead of blood flowing through his veins. His hand came down on Saeās shoulder again, almost as an afterthought, shaking him as if to say relax, loosen up, laugh a little.
Sae shrugged off the handā telling himself that Shidou was simply a touchy person to quell the flicker of anger stirring in the back of his mindā and took a step back. Or, tried to. Heād forgotten that the bar was behind him.
Wincing ever-so-slightly at what mustāve been his third altercation with the barās counter, he responded with a gentle hum, āThat last goal was fraudulent. If the goalkeeper was half as good at his job as he was at picking up girls, heād have caught it.ā His eyes slid to his teamās goalkeeper, who was well into his cups and chatting up a group of star-struck women. The sight made him shudder. Disgusting.
Shidouās eyes widened almost comically, āFraudulent?ā He said the word like he hadnāt believed what heād heard.
Sae barely noticed, nodding along absently to the beat of flamenco music blaring joyfully in the background, āAfter all, the arc of the shot was centimeters off the best course for a goal. Iām surprised that it managed toāā
He cut off, blinking hard at the sight before him. His little brother stood not too far behind Shidou, face screwed up in anger as he began to stomp over to them.
Rin? Where had he come from? Had he been standing close by this entire time?
Sae had thought that Rin and Shidou were like fire and water, unable to come within six feet of each other. After all, they hadnāt even been able to play a match together in blue lock without some kind of altercation. But, apparently he'd thought wrong.
āGo on. Finish your sentence.ā Rinās voice cut through his thoughts, cold, rough, and taut with emotion. Anger, Sae assumed, what with the way his body trembled and his fists clenched at his sides. The young striker sidled in next to Shidou, too close, as if heād lost a sense for the world around him. He swayed in place, but his aquamarine eyes remained fixed on Sae.
āOh!ā Shidou exclaimed, like he also hadnāt realized Rin was sticking so close to him, āRinrin! We were just talking about you!ā His tone held the saccharine sweetness of someone desperately trying to stop an impending argument.
āShut it,ā Rin snapped, shoving Shidou away from him despite the fact that heād been the one to come in so close, āFinish. Your. Sentence.ā He poked a finger at Sae, as if staring him down wasnāt enough to indicate who he was talking to.
Sae, to be honest, didnāt even recall the rant heād been going onā something about Rinās fraudulent goalā and certainly wasn't going to finish his sentence. So, like heād done to Luna only hours before, he skirted the question.
Turning away from Rin as if heād never heard him speakā nor seen him at allā he looked Shidou dead in the eye and continued on with his life like Rin had never spoken.
His beer was halfway to his lips when it was suddenly knocked out of his hand. Its contents sprayedā landing on his clothes, the floor, the bar, and many of its patronsā as it plummeted to the floor and broke with a violent shower of glass.
āWHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU?!ā Rinās voice rang out, loud in the sudden silence of the bar. Heads turned, and even as drunk as he was Sae felt a rush of embarrassment at the childish display. He could only imagine the headlines tomorrowā Trouble amongst brothers? Itoshi siblings caught exchanging vicious words after PXG and Re Alās unexpected tie.
Wrinkling his nose at his ruined outfit, Sae fixed Rin with an unimpressed stare, āYou better be paying for that.ā
Shidou shuffled uncomfortably, raising an arm between the two of them hesitantly, āHey, now, Itoshis, letās take it down a notch, hmm?ā
āIāā Rinās voice cracked. He blinked violently, shaking his head, and took a step closer. He didnāt even seem to notice Shidouās arm as it bumped against his waist. āYou have the audacity to tell me my shot, my goal,ā He sucked in a shaky breath, shoulders trembling as if under an invisible weight, āwas fraudulent? As if it didnāt tie the gameā as ifā as if you could have done any better?ā His eyes were shadowed by his hair, enough so that Sae could hardly tell whether or not he was being serious. Did he really think Sae was lying, when he said the goal could've been better?
āI could have,ā Sae said, slowly, then clarified after a pause: āDone it better.ā
That must've been the wrong thing to say, as Rinās entire body went rigid in a heartbeat. His breath came out shallow, fast, in ragged pants. As if the bar had suddenly been sucked of viable air.
Shidouās eyes flickered nervously towards Rin. He seemed a littleā concerned? His arm moved from where itād been holding Rin back, up to rest on Rinās shoulder.
Sae was surprised when the young striker let it stay there, instead of pushing it away.
āRin,ā Shidou said, gently, tugging at Rinās shoulder like he meant to pull him awayā from Sae, and maybe even the bar itself. But Rin remained rigid as a statue, head bowed in what looked like a staring contest with the ground.
āNii-chan⦠youā¦ā Rinās voice was soft, almost undetectable, building in volume with each breath, āYouāre such an asshole of an older brother!ā He raised his head, revealing the shine of tears in his eyes, the quiver of his lips as he swallowed back a sob.
Sae was struck with the sudden sensation of his heart dropping into his stomachā no matter how many times he saw his brotherās face crumble into despair, the pain it caused him would never lessen. Even if it was a necessary one.
āI tied the game!ā Rin cried, straining against Shidouās comforting arm, āI tied the game! Whyā why do you still look at me like that?ā As if he hadnāt said it enough, he reiterated it a third time: āI TIED THE GAME, SAE!ā
Futilely, Shidou tried to salvage the situation, āRin, letās go find Lokiā¦ā His weak suggestion did nothing to ease the tension of the situation.
Sae rubbed at his temples. It was getting too late for thisā his head was starting to feel like it might explode. It was hard for him to even think, let alone deal with someone elseās distress. The weight of Rinās emotions were too much for him to bearā they always had been. It was easier to feign indifference, easier to provoke Rin to anger.
After all, Rin would never become a world-class striker if he continued to search for someone else's praise. No matter how many times Sae had to shut him down, he wouldn't let Rin fall into the same stagnant pool he found himself wallowing in. If that meant he had to become the villain in Rinās eyes, so be it.
āJust shut up,ā Sae stared at Rin, to ensure that he got the message and knew it was purposeful, āYouāre so loud. Like a buzzing insect.ā Just walk away, Rin. Donāt look at me.
āDamn.ā Shidouās jaw was slack, his eyes blinking rapidly as if he were trying to rewrite reality. His hand had fallen from Rinās shoulder, now uselessly hanging at his side.
Rin looked at Sae. His eyes were wide, crystalline, suddenly empty of all tears. The wet tracks on his flushed face were the only signs of his sorrow. He swayed, minutely, feet dragging forward.
Sae only had a split second to quirk his eyebrow up in question before Rinās fist was flying into his face.
The impact rattled his jaw, the force traveling up his skull and into his brain. His vision went blurry, then flashed white with agony as his back slammed against the cold stone of the barās counter. He coughed out a breath, tasting the sharp iron of blood on his tongue, and reached out a shaking hand to push himself off the bar. He blinked, felt the rattle of air in his lungs, the pitter-patter of his heart in his veins.
The world settled into a strange calm. He barely noticed the sound of the bar around him as he straightened up, eyes focusing on Rin.
His brotherās chest was heaving, his right hand trembling, knuckles already turning red. He seemed halfway to crying again. As if the punch heād just thrown had hurt him more than it could've ever hurt Sae.
Shidou was standing there aimlessly, face scrunched up in confusion as if his brain couldn't quite grasp the situation in real time. Sae could almost hear the gears in his head clicking.
If Saeās entire skull wasn't throbbingā from his own brotherās punch and his excessive drinkingā he mightāve cared. Might've thought a little beyond his own pain, and might've thought of how fucking messed up the whole situation was.
Instead, he wiped the blood off his face, and delivered a punch straight into Rinās jaw. He barely felt the impact.
The next few moments blurred together.
Rin stumbled, crashing into some strangers, a dazed expression overtaking his face. His nose dripped dark, ruby liquid onto the floor.
Sae instinctively took a step forwardā to do what he wasnāt sureā before he caught himself. His hands hovered at his sides, uncertain. He had the sudden urge to rewind time.
A heartbeat passed and Rin was back up, pushing off of warm bodies to right himself, rushing at him and throwing another punch.
The floor wavered beneath Saeās feet, far too unstable for him to dodge. The fist connected with his face again.
Fuck.
He hit Rin back. Something crunched. He wasnāt sure if it was his hand or Rinās face. He didnāt bother to check.
Rinās weight slammed into him.
He didnāt hesitate to grab at his hair and try to wrench him off.
Someone was yelling.
Rinās head cracked into his chin, sending them both reeling.
A hand roughly jerked him back, followed by the sound of a familiar voice. It seemed panicked, shocked even.
Saeās ears rang, vision spinning and spinning and spinning until he couldn't tell what was up or down. He thought, for a second, that he might throw up or pass out. He stared at the floor in a daze, tracing the sticky stains of beer, blood, and god knows what else as he struggled to stay upright.
āWHAT THE HELL, SAE??!!ā Shidouās voice made him flinch. He sounded livid. Like Sae had just killed a puppy and laughed. To be honest, the demon wasnāt too far off, if that was what he was thinking. Rin was a little bit like a dog that kept coming back to him even when he did his best to shoo him away.
Sae raised his head and immediately regretted it. Shidouās bubblegum eyes were trained on him, filled with disappointment, anger, and maybe even disgust.
āWhat is going on here?ā Lunaās voice was serious, for once, as he stepped towards themā breaching the ring that Sae hadnāt even realized had formed around him and Rin. āA fight?ā His head swiveled between Saeā something shocked flashing in his gazeā and Rin, who was being supported by Julian Loki a couple feet away.
Luna stepped closer, examined Saeās face like a disappointed mother, āReally, Sae? Not exactly what I expected from you.ā His head cocked to the side, as if he were waiting for an answer. An explanation.
Sae found that he didnāt have any explanation to give him.
Rin struggled a little in Lokiās hold, spitting what might've been a toothā Sae really hoped that wasnāt the caseā onto the ground, eyes practically flaming with wrath, āNot gonna say anything, Sae?ā He spat Saeās name like it was a curseā malignant and vile. Like if he said it too much, itād reduce him to an incurable state, fundamentally broken. Like itād ruin his future just like it had ruined his dreams.
It made Saeās breath hitch, catching on a lump in his throat.
āCalm down.ā Loki placated, looking more bored than anything. Sae recalled that he had been Rinās mentor since Blue Lock. It made sense that heād be an expert at dealing with Rin.
He tried not to think about the time where heād been considered the same.
Rin didnāt stop talking, āHave you finally realized that youāre a shitty older brother?ā He laughed, bitter and sharp. No one else joined him. āGonna apologize? Oh wait, I forgot, you canāt, because youāre a fucking robot thatās doing a shit job at pretending to be human.ā The young strikerās chest was heaving, blood dripping down his face from his noseā his broken nose.
Sae sucked in a sharp breath, feeling dizzy. Heād done that. Heād fucked up his brotherās face. What the fuck was wrong with him? He felt like passing out.
Lunaās face swam in front of him, as if he were viewing it from underwater. It rippled, faintly, like he was speaking, but Sae couldnāt hear a word over the rushing in his ears.
He lurched forwardā sudden enough that he elicited a surprised āWhoa!ā from Shidouā and promptly threw up all over the floor. And Lunaās shoes, but he didnāt feel bad about that at all. The man deserved it for convincing him to come to this shitty party.
Faintly, Sae registered what sounded like the deep, long-suffering sigh of an exhausted parent (which was, most likely, Luna).
āCome on. Youāre going home.ā Lunaās hand grabbed at his arm, pulling him away from Shidou who reluctantly let go.
He let himself be dragged, head hanging, eyes resolutely fixed on the ground. It was easier that way. To ignore the feeling of Shidouās disappointment, of Lokiās disappointed boredom, and most of all Rinās angry, tearful eyes. They branded him with their anger, pinned him with their sorrow. As if even now, even after what heād done, Rin was still begging him. Look at me, Sae.
And he almost did.
But then he remembered all that heād doneā for what purpose heād done itā and steeled himself against the shattering of his heart. He wasnāt going to stop now, not when Rin was so close to the top, so close to breaking away from Saeās dead weight to make a name for himself.
Rin would be fine in a few days. A week at most. Afterall, there was so little left between them that mattered, anymore. Sae had destroyed that himself, years ago on a soccer pitch, where snow fell like ash in the crisp night air.
He barely noticed when Luna dragged him through the barās door, exiting onto the busy streets of Madrid.
The Spaniard stopped, stared into the brightness of the city, and let out a deep, long-suffering sigh, āWhat am I going to do with you?ā He shook his head, the movement jostling Sae from where he rested almost completely on his shoulder, a dead weight. āIāve never asked what was going on between you and your brother⦠but⦠a fight? Heās your brother, Sae. You should act like it.ā He paused again, running his free hand through his hair. āThe one time you go out⦠of course this happens⦠canāt take you anywhere, huh, genius?ā
Sae hummed noncommittallyā heād decided to refrain from answering Lunaās questions before heād even started speaking. All his energy had drained away the second heād seen Rinās dazed expression, eyes wide as if he was thinking Did nii-chan really just punch me?
Fucking hell.
His eyes burned, throat closing up as he choked on a sob.
Luna flinched beside him, surprised, green eyes flashing with shock before shuttering into something more professional, āSae.ā Luna shifted both of his hands to Saeās shoulders, bringing them face-to-face. āTomorrow. Call Rin, okay? Apologize. Donāt be dumb. I know you started that fight, youāre an asshole, so take responsibility.ā
Sae must've made a pathetic noise, as Luna paused to look at him like one might look at a poor, drenched cat on the side of the road. The striker briefly patted his head before he continued to speak, slowly and gently like he was comforting a spooked animal, āI called a car for you, so go home and sleep. Clear your head, sober up, and think about what you're going to say tomorrow. Got it?ā
Sae blinked at him, through the tears in his eyes and the throbbing of his head.
Luna shook himā Sae could barely keep himself upright, even though the blonde was being gentleā and repeated himself, āGot it?ā His green eyes pierced into Saeās soul, fiercely, refusing to take his silence as an answer, insisting upon a verbal promise.
āMhm,ā Sae mumbled, if only to get Luna to relax and allow him to lean his full weight against his shoulder again.
They lulled into a comfortable silenceā well, as silent as it could get in Madrid at night.
The city slowed down, but its motion never quite stopped. It was almost like a beating heart, never relaxing and always pumping. The humming din of the cityā the slap of feet on pavement, the rush of traffic in the streets, the loud laughs of passersbyā was so familiar to Sae it was akin to a lullaby. It soothed the ache in his head, the pain in his chest, and the buzzing of his thoughts.
Luna was steady as a rock beside him, a familiar presence that brought him comfort. Heād hated him, at first, for the ease with which he seemed to playā for his world-class talent as a striker. Heād been jealous, beyond words, beyond his own understanding, all those years ago. But now, heād venture to say they were close to friends.
Sighing deeply, Saeās eyes fluttered, and he relaxed fully onto Lunaās shoulder.
ā¦
The next thing Sae knew, he was being gently shaken awake.
āSae, the carās here,ā Luna said, voice ringing loudly in Saeās ears. He stirred, eyes fluttering, and squinted against the bright city light. All the noise came flooding back at once, his head throbbing with a vengeance.
āHuh?ā The word came out gravely and audibly confused. Sae couldāve sworn heād only closed his eyes for a second.
āThe car,ā Luna clarified, wasting no time in pushing Sae back onto his own feet as he recovered from his groggy state. A gentle hand pushed the midfielder towards the edge of the sidewalk where a car waited impatiently, lights blinding.
As they approached, the driver rolled a window down, and began speaking in rapid-fire Spanish, āEstĆ”s Leonardo?ā A couple other phrases fell from his lips, too fast for Sae to comprehend.
āSĆ!ā Luna responded, before rattling off some other words at an equally fast pace, smiling pleasantly. The language fell naturally off his lips, almost musical in its cadance.
Sae had gotten better at understanding Spanish over the years, but the alcohol and punches had taken a toll on his brain. He could only catch something along the lines of āaquĆ⦠dinero⦠Sae Itoshi⦠apartamento⦠doscientos⦠sieteā¦ā.
Once he was done with the conversation, Luna tapped him on the small of his back, āAlright, hop in. I told him where to go so don't worry your pretty little head, Itoshi.ā He smiled after, like he hadnāt just done something so significantly kind for Sae that the midfielder nearly thanked him out loud, as out of it as he was.
Nodding awkwardly, Sae stumbled forward and struggled with the door for a few seconds before sliding into the car. The interior smelt fresh, a nice break from the stale, sweaty air surrounding the bar.
āSee yaā at practice!ā Luna saluted him, still standing outside as if he were watching to make sure Sae got in the car without face planting. The thought made Sae feel a little bit less terrible. āDonāt forget to call your brother! Text me when you get home.ā
Sae would've rolled his eyes if his head hadnāt been throbbing so badly, āSure.ā
The car swiftly pulled away, leaving Luna in its wake.
The driverās fingerās tapped against the steering wheel cheerfully, following the beat of the music blaring from the radio. He glanced over his shoulder at Sae sympathetically, āRough night?ā His english was heavily accented.
Sae turned his eyes towards the window, biting back the sharp, What do you think? resting on the tip of his tongue. Luna was rightā he was an asshole.
The driver didnāt seem to mind, though, and turned his attention back to the road. Somehow, that made Sae feel even worse, and his chest ached with guilt. He turned to the window to try and quell the feeling, but it wouldn't stopā in fact, it seemed to get worse with each passing second.
It sank in then, exactly what heād done, as he breathed shakily in the back of some strangerās car (albeit a stranger that Luna had hired to drive him home).
Heād punched his brother in the face with no remorse, like some fucking teenage sociopath hitting a dog just to hear it whine. Heād felt the impact of Rinās jaw on his knuckles, and hadnāt thought āThat was wrong, I should stopā. Heād only hesitated minutely, not even uttering an apology. He had acted like he wasnāt an adult who knew better.
At least Rin had the excuse of his short temper, younger age, and the fact that Sae had been the one to provoke him. But what did Sae have? The feeble excuse that he was drunk, that he wasnāt thinking, that he hadnāt meant to break Rinās nose? The thought was pathetic, and it made him want to puke.
He really owed Rin an apology.
Saeās fingers twitched, and he reached for his phone to text Rin, before remembering that the number in his phone was from when the striker was 11 years old. From before heād left for Spain.
He almost laughed right then and thereā heād just hummed along to Lunaās requests when he didnāt even have his own brotherās number? God, he was a deplorable human being. If he even wanted to apologize (a voice in his head, parroting Lunaās words from earlier, told him that it was his responsibility. That he owed it to Rin for breaking his nose.) heād have to ask someone to give Rinās number to him.
Sae lowered his head into his hands, breathing shakily.
He knew why heād acted that wayā he was trying to help. Rin was talented. He took to soccer like a fish took to water. That being said, he was a natural. He was born for the world stage, and heād already risen farther than Sae ever would.
Sae himself had known that heād never be a striker quite like Rin when heād first stepped foot in Spain at the tender age of 13. Heād been naive to think he even had a chance when strikers like Luna existed in the world. His heart had shattered at the sight of such seamless dribbling, such calculated shots. He remembered staring at the ceiling of his dorm, late into the night, and thinking that his soccer, Japanese soccer, would never be good enough. That he would never be good enough. No matter how much he wished it would be true, his destiny was preordained.
The process of realization had been painful, but he was glad it had been him. He felt sick at the very thought of Rin experiencing such soul-crushing revelations.
Part of him liked to think that if Rin had gone to Spain in his stead, the boy wouldāve thrived. That he wouldnāt have crumbled under the pressure like Sae had. That he would've risen to the top and shown Japan what a true prodigy looked like.
But he knew that wasnāt true.
It was simply a childish fantasy that he desperately wanted to cling to. One that he wouldnāt let himself cling to. After all, Sae Itoshi was nothing but disciplined.
He strove for ultimate perfection. Something he would never achieve for himself, anymore, after realizing his limitations. But Rin had all that he lacked as a strikerā his talent, his instinct, his ego far surpassed Saeās. And Sae had realized, as he stood there, years ago, under the unforgiving lights of that snowy field in Japan, that he was the supporting actor to Rinās story. That he was the midfielder to Rinās striker.
Rin hadnāt accepted that notion. Heād been revolted. Caught up in the false reality of their dream.
So Sae had snapped at him, called him a defective product, a pain-in-the-ass, and told him that he made him puke.
It was all to push Rin away from attempting to realize their impossible dream, away from the harsh reality of Saeās inadequate soccer, and towards his own perfection.
If Rin was able to let go of their dreamā let go of being Rin Itoshi, younger brother of the number 1 striker in the worldā Sae was almost certain that heād achieve victory. That heād be better off.
He just didnāt understand why Rin couldnāt see that.
Sae raised his head, resting it against the cool glass of the carās window. The carās engine made the entire car rumble, slightly, letting out a low, soothing purr.
The driver had the radio on, a slow, melancholy song playing. The lyrics washed over Sae like a harsh reflection of his own reality.
Ya no estƔs
Y esta noche tan callada me consume mƔs
Sae felt the ache of sorrow build up in his throat, stir like a shadowy monster in the depths of his mind. The darkness of the night seemed to creep into the cracks of the car, clawing into his lungs, worming its way under his skin, infecting his heart.
Hay un fantasma que me acaricia con tu mirada
Y aquĆ estoy yo, deseando que otra vez sienta tu amor
He felt like clawing his organs out of his chest, like vomiting them onto the floor, āTurn it off.ā His voice was thick, shaky, breathless.
The driverās eyes darted to him in the mirror, maybe concerned, maybe annoyed. Sae didn't care, as the song carried on and each vocal, each note, took another stab at his heart.
Yo te amƩ
Tanto que te escribà canciones que nunca te enseñé
āTURN IT OFF!ā He shouted, erratically, muscles tensing as he sat up from his relaxed position. His head aching and his fists throbbing as he dug his nails into his skin. He resisted the impulse to slap his hands over his ears or tug at his own hair.
Te amaba tanto que se me olvido como quererme
Quisiera ser feliz, pero aprendĆ que sin ti esto no es vivir
The driver flinched violently at his response, āSorry, sir,ā His right hand went to fiddle with the dial of the radio, the left place precariously on the steering wheel. The car swerved, slightly, at the sudden motion, before falling back into a straight line.
The volume turned down a littleā not all the way yetā but Sae still couldnāt block out the sound of the song from his ears. It was like a parasite, burrowing its way into his brain.
He bit his tongue as the carās radio continued to blare each sorrowful note of the songā the driverās fingers fumbling with the volume as he steered the car with one handā knowing it wouldnāt be right to yell at the man again, but fighting the urge to do so anyway.
Tal vez es necesario que sienta tanto daƱo
Este frĆo en el alma y el duro desengaƱo
Nunca pude expresarlo
The man glanced nervously backwards as the car entered a busy intersection, as if trying to convey to Sae that he was going to turn it off, he just had to focus on the upcoming traffic. His right hand hesitantly returned to the wheel.
It made Sae feel deplorable, rotten. Who was he to blame this kind manā who was driving him home at some ungodly hourā for something so completely out of his control? He didn't choose the songs that played on the radio, afterall. He wasnāt the one whoād made Sae break Rinās nose, whoād made him act like a sociopath and tell his perfect, talented brother that he was imperfect and talentless.
The driver glanced at him again, right hand reaching for the dial once more. Sae saw his own face in the mirrorā distorted in anger and disgust. It shattered something in him, that the driver must have thought the expression was directed towards him, when it was really because Sae was disgusted and angry at himself.
The song continued, in the background, the lyrics crystal clear even as the midfielderās heart crumbled under the weight of his guilt.
Ya no estƔs
Y esta noche tan callada me consume mƔs
āItās fineāā
Saeās head cracked against the window. He felt his skull rattle, heard a crunch that might've been the glassā or mightāve been his head.
His vision went white, thoughts fading into a foggy mist of jumbled impressions as he was hit with an overwhelming amount of pain.
His hands scrambled for purchaseā on the carās door, the front seat, anythingā to ground him, but found nothing.
The world spun in a violent circle until he wasn't sure what was up or down, left or right.
Sae was a ping-pong ball caught in between two paddles as he was hit back and forth, back and forth, until his brain was turned to mush, until his body went numb and his ribs crack-ed under the pressure.
The carās tumbling slowed, scraping against the ground as friction worked its magic.
He tried to take a deep breath, heart racing. What came out was halfway between a wheeze and a cough, more of a choke than a breath. It didnāt slow the pounding of his heart nor the racing of his blood in his veins.
Sae blinked, almost absently.
What the hell?
It seemed to be the only thing he could thinkā the only thing he could make of the situation.
He didn't want to believe what had undoubtedly occurredā didnāt want to think about it. Because it had been his fault. Heād caused this.
He stirred from his prone position. Or, tried to stir. His body didnāt feel like his, didn't feel real. Each of his muscles were tensed, trembling against a motion that had stopped, against pain that had sunk into his cells.
Sae blinked again.
Hay un fantasma que me acaricia con tu mirada
Amidst the quiet, buzzing sound of the still-working radioā could life be any less cruel to him? ā there was a gentle plink, plink, plink. Like water dripping. It was barely audible over the static in his mind.
Y aquĆ estoy yo
He turned his head towards the front of the car. He paused.
Deseando que otra vez sienta tu amor
His eyes widened, pupils dilating. Some primal instinct within him fired, nerves instantly set on edge, his skin prickling with age-old caution.
Blood.
It painted the floor of the car a dark, ruby red. Was it wrong that it reminded him of Rin? Of the rivulets of carmine that fell from his nose? Of the crack of his nose as Saeās fist kissed his face?
Tal vez es necesario que sienta tanto daƱo
His eyes followed the trail of blood upward. To a hand.
Este frĆo en el alma y el duro desengaƱo
Sae recalled something his father had said, once. āBad luck comes in threesā.
He thought of his fight with Rin, the sudden crash of the car, and wondered: If this was his second dose of bad luck, what would be his third?
No pude expresarlo, pero me hiciste tanto daƱo
La idea de siempre estar solo ya no me sorprende
The steady plink of blood on the floor caught his attention, again. It pooled, stagnant, at his feet. It should have made him flinch, or maybe scream. It didnāt.
Sae stared at it, intensely, like taking his eyes off of it, even for a second, might end his life. Even so, he could see it, in the corner of his vision, lurking, reminding him of what heād done.
Ya no estƔs
The radio crackled, mocking.
His heart constricted. His breaths stuttered.
His hands clenched into fists. His eyes traced each terrible drop of blood that fell to the floor, darting no further than the tips of the hand.
Donāt look.
Saeās head spun. His body trembled.
Y esta noche tan callada
He blinked. Heard his uneven breaths rattle through his lungs. Felt his heart pound in his ears.
Like fire, his entire body throbbed. But his legā his left legā felt numb. He didn't look at it, couldn't look at it.
Was that pain the third and final consequence of his bad luck?
Me consume mƔs, mƔs
Sae wondered, briefly, if heād die there, like that. Pathetic, beaten up, and shitty.
It made him think. Not of himself, not of soccer, not even of his parents. But of Rin. His little brother. Of the moment when Rin had stopped looking at him like he was a glimmering diamond and exchanged it with a look more reserved for a filthy cockroach.
How that was his faultā by his designā but it had hurt anyway.
How it had made him thinkā Was soccer really worth destroying their dream? Was Rinās perfection really worth ruining their relationship?
At the time, heād weighed the questions with a cold, precise calculation. Would their shared dream hold Rin back? Would it not?
The answer had been obvious. It would. 100%.
So, fresh off the rattling reality of his insufficiency, Sae had told Rin the truthā told him he was trashing their dream to become a midfielder, to fulfill a supporting role in Rinās rise to stardom.
His selfish younger brother hadnāt liked that one bit. Heād yelled something at him, a phrase that still echoed in Saeās brain: Youāre not the older brother I shared a dream with!
It had pissed him off. It had hurt him. And heād snapped at him. Called him trash, defective, a pain-in-the-ass.
Sae laughed, bitterly.
Rin was right. He was a shitty older brother.
Afterall, it was clear to him now, face-to-face with the culmination of his karma, of the final blows of his bad luck, that the answer had been no. To both questions.
No, it wasnāt worth throwing away their dream. No, it wasnāt worth ruining their relationship.
Hay un fantasma que me acaricia con tu mirada
The blood continued to drip steadily in front of his feet.
Plink.
Plink.
Plink.
His hand made an aborted motion for his phone, muscles trembling with weakness as they struggled to respond.
He needed to say sorry, beforeā
Sae didnāt have his own brotherās phone number, did he?
How could he keep forgetting?
No siento nada
āRināā
His plea was met with a void of silence.
No one was there.
Notes:
THE SONG: Ya No EstƔs, DannyLux
idk how most authors plan and id really love to know different planning strategies you guys have
planning lowkey pmo bc i HATE the idea but make myself do it bc if i dont ill be so lost in the sauce šš
so⦠even if this takes me a while to cook up itās planned! just not completely written yet
updates will NOT follow a schedule bc of the crazy amounts of schoolwork i get, but iāll be trying my best!
sorry if any of the characters seemed OOC š
Chapter 2
Summary:
āShidou, turn it down.ā Frustrated, Rin turned to look at Shidouās face. The man was strangely still, eyes wide as they focused on the TV. Unbidden, Rinās eyes followed his gazeā what could he be so focused on?ā and found what looked like a news broadcast on the screen. āWhy are you watching that? Itās in Spanishāā
His heart dropped as his eyes caught on a singular word. Or, rather, name.
Sae.
What the hell was Saeās name doing on the news?
Notes:
Biggest chapter Iāve ever written so far!!
This was my first time writing Rinās POV and I had a LOT of fun with it.
This chapter was a little more tricky for me to write than the first, but Iāve had a lot of free time lately so I finished it pretty fast.
Also i just realized iāve been writing āblondeā for shidou instead of āblondā which is proper, because āblondeā is for women. I think I fixed it, though.
Anyways, thanks for reading :)
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
The first thing Rin registered when he woke was the revolting clamminess of an armā that was not hisā sticking to his skin.
The second thing he registered was the body of the insect it was attached to (that is, Shidou Ryusei). The other strikerās limbs were haphazardly thrown over Rinās body like heād mistaken it for a pillow. Which it was not, thank you very much.
Rin drew in a deep breath, blinked at the ceiling, and muttered to himself, āWhat the fuckā¦ā
His eyebrows furrowed as he triedā and failedā to come up with a scenario that would see him and Shidou deciding to sleep in the same bed. And not immediately killing each other (regardless of who came up with the idea) for suggesting it.
Thinking about it harder only chased away the barely-there hints of his memory, adding to the pounding of his head. He just chalked it up to being blackout drunkā Rin would never admit that he reached that state quite easily (Shidouās lilting voice echoed in the back of his mind āLightweight~ā)ā even though there was no way that would be enough for him to sleep next to that filthy roach.
Rin brushed his sweaty hair out of his eyes, bumping his nose as he did so. The motion sent a sharp spark of pain along what seemed to be every nerve in his face.
āFuck!ā He shouted, not bothering to lower his volume. There wasnāt any need for silence, as Shidou slept like a goddamn rock. It was one of his only redeeming qualities as a roommate.
Rin had never expected that heād reach a stage of his life where Shidouās presence wasnāt an immediate catalyst into conflict. They had clashed constantly in Blue Lock, had continued to do so in the Neo Egoist League, and had even fought well into their professional careers.
Somewhere along the line, though, all that fighting had brought them a little closer, and when Rin had been signed onto PXG officially, there wasnāt anyone else heād have wanted for his roommate except Shidou.
Not that they didnāt fight still. It had just become something more playful, friendly, and less damaging.
So when Rin felt the swelling of his nose he knew that it hadnāt been Shidou whoād broken it. It had been someone else.
His head throbbed.
Shoving Shidouās sweaty body off of him (gross), he swung his legs over the edge of the bed.
He was still dressed in the black jeans and button-up heād worn to the partyā now wrinkled and disgusting, riding up in all the wrong places. Eugh. He desperately needed to shower.
Rin stood, surveying the room for his suitcase. Heād sworn that heād placed it by the empty chair in the far corner of the room (something all hotel rooms seemed to sport). The room was much messier than it had been just the day before. His suitcase, which had been on the chair, now laid on the ground. It looked like it had heen haphazardly kicked to the floor.
And in the chairā
Julian Loki?
The man was dead asleep in the chair, neck at an awkward angle. The sight made him pause, another wave of confusion washing over him, before he remembered that Charles was Lokiās designated roommate.
PXGās midfielder was still too young to drink, just a year shy of Spainās age limit. If Loki had come stumbling into their shared room at some god forsaken hour of the night, Charles would have absolutely lost it. Rin had unfortunately witnessed the destruction such a situation had caused before. Lokiād come knocking at his and Shidouās door with bite marks and scratches.
Needless to say, the boy was rabid.
It made sense, especially since Charles was like an eviler, tinier version of Shidou. And Shidou was certainly feral.
Rin stomped over to his suitcaseā much softer than he might've if itād been Shidou sleeping in the chairā and grabbed a pair of sweatpants, a t-shirt, and a few other necessities, then quickly made his way into the bathroom.
He threw his clothes onto the ground, and meant to start the water, but his gaze caught on the mirror. On what it reflected. On his face.
His nose was swollen, slightly bruised at the edges, crusted with a few flecks of dried blood. Someone mustāve set it for him, as it was surprisingly straight, but that wasnāt what had caught his attention. His eyes were puffy. Red. Like heād been crying. Had he cried?
Rin asked himself the question, but he already knew the answer. The evidence was staring him straight in the face. There was only one reason his eyes would look like that. Only one reason heād ever cried in his life.
Sae.
The memories came back to him in whispers, like faint mist that clung to the horizon after a night full of fog, the barest reminder.
Fraudulent. That fucking word, uttered from his brotherās lips like it was nothing. An insult that was made worse when Sae said it so flatly, like it was a fact and not a blatant lie.
Rin had almost believed it, when heād heard it. That was how normal it had sounded, coming from Saeās lips.
Heād still waited, though. Waited for him to take it back, to say to Shidou, āI was just joking. Rin was perfect.ā though he knew it wouldnāt happen.
It made him want to punch himself. It made his chest ache. Was he still so naive to think that Sae actually cared about him? He knew the answer to that, too. Yes.
Rin traced the swollen lines of his face, the bruises under his skin. Recalled a fist connecting with his face, once, twice, more times than he could remember, then tangling in his hair.
Saeās eyes, their eyes, fixed on him. Impassionate, unmoving. As if he was just completing another boring task (if that task had been bashing Rinās face in).
He remembered yelling, remembered crying.
But Sae had just left, like he always did. Left without a backwards glance. Without an apology. Without remorse. Like a fucking robot.
Rin could almost imagine a little voice declaring, āmission completed!ā as Sae walked away, like he was a video game protagonist whoād just completed a quest.
His reflection in the mirror blinked at him. Even beaten up and misshapen, it was undeniable that he was an Itoshi. It made him sick. He didn't want to be associated with his brother anymore. He wanted to forget being an Itoshi and especially being the younger Itoshi. He wanted to be Rin. No Itoshi, no Saeās younger brother. Nothing but Rin.
But It was near impossible when his own reflection reminded him so much that he was Saeās little brother.
There was a time when heād been proud of their similaritiesā their tourmaline eyes, their passion for soccer, and most of all their shared dream. That had been years ago. Before Sae had held the delicate promise of their dream in his hands and crushed it right before his eyes. Like it meant nothing. Like it didnāt matter to him. And it had meant everything to Rin. It had mattered the most to Rin.
Rin bit the inside of his cheek, blinking back tears. Why did he even care? He should've known Sae wouldāve said something like that, about his goal. He always found something imperfect about Rin. He always said something cruel. He wasnāt going to change. He wasnāt going to apologize.
So whyā¦
Why did it hurt so much when he didnāt?
Rin was brought back to reality by the unceremonious slam of the bathroom door hitting the wall.
āRinrinā¦ā Shidou stood in all his sleep-rumpled glory, one hand on the bathroom door frame while the other attempted to tame the wild mess of his hair, āHave you been smoking?ā
āNo? What the fuck?ā Rin was too shocked to be outraged. The question was so confusing that his earlier emotions were shoved to the back of his mind while he tried to understand what the hell Shidou was going on about. āWhy would I ever be smoking?ā He spat the word with disgust. His lungs were a vital asset to his performance. Smoking would do nothing but destroy them, and the very thought of it made him want to vomit.
āYour eyes are red. You look high.ā Shidou said as he waltzed into the bathroom, unbothered but most importantly uninvited.
Rin realized a second too late that this was not good for his plans to shower at all, āHEY! Get out!ā
āNo can do, lashes,ā Shidou turned to him, blinking slowly with those pink bug eyes of his like some stupid fucking dog, āI have an appointment with the bathroom this morning.ā Rin shouldnāt have even considered that the roach would come up with a reasonable excuse. He should've just shut the door on him as soon as he saw him.
āYouāre insane if you think Iām letting you stink up this bathroom before I shower.ā He glared at the blond, moving to block him from taking another step further. Shidou was already inside the bathroom, so it was a little futile but Rin wasnāt just going to let him in that easily.
Shidou pulled a weird face that had Rin backing up instinctively, āUmm, not that kinda appointment⦠more like, if you donāt get out of my way Iām going to puke all over you.ā
Rin looked at him in disbelief, āThatās not going to workā¦ā He stepped back hesitantly despite his words, scanning Shidouās face. He did look a little pale.
āNo, seriously. Move.ā Shidouās face paled even further, and before Rin could blink he was being shoved aside as Shidou vomited straight into the sink.
Fucking disgusting.
And he said as much.
āEWW, WHAT THE FUCK?ā Rin had never exited a room faster in his life. Slamming the door behind himā which thankfully muffled the roachās disgusting noisesā he took a deep breath and tried to calm his racing heart.
Leave it to Shidou to cause trouble after the first few minutes heād been awake. And throwing up in the sink? That was just criminal. Thinking of it made Rin want to jump out of the window.
He was living with a goddamn animal.
Shuddering, he abandoned his plan to take a shower and flopped onto the bed. Now void of Shidou, it was a lot more comfortable.
āHe okay?ā Lokiās voice made Rin flinchā he hadnāt noticed that the man had woken up in his haste to escape the bathroom. The golden-eyed striker had unfolded himself from his awkward position in the chair and was now standing in the middle of the room.
Rin shrugged noncommittally in response, leaving it to Loki to decide if the gesture meant How would I know? or Do I look like I care?
Loki seemed to take it as the former, straightening out his clothes and walking over to the bathroom, āYou alive in there, Shidou?ā He knocked on the door, politely. That was something Rin admired about Loki. He always managed to be kind, with every action he performed. Even on the field his condescension managed to come out politeā if you didnāt pay attention to the words you might blink and miss the insult.
Rin, on the other hand, had always been blunt, spitting out sharp, venomous words like magma sprayed from a volcano. Heād always been like thatā like his brother, but more hot-headed. The thought brought a bitter taste to his mouth.
āShidou?ā Lokiās voice rang out again, louder.
āUhhāā There was the sound of coughing and running water, āLetās just say⦠Shidou, one. Sink, zero.ā
Loki turned to Rin, one eyebrow raised, as if to say What the hell does that mean? before sighing deeply, āAlright⦠Iām going back to my room. Gonna check on Charles.ā The french striker walked away from the bathroom door, tripping on Shidouās hot-pink converse (which the blond must have carelessly strewn across the floor last night) as he went.
āTake him with you,ā Rin blurted out, as close to begging as he could handle.
Loki only smiled at him before swiftly exiting the hotel room.
Ugh.
Rin rolled over on the bed, swiping his phone from the nightstand, and began to scroll through his messages mindlessly.
His parents hadnāt sent anything, as expected. Not even a ācongratulationsā. Maybe they would in a monthsā time, or more likely never. It didn't really bother him. Theyād been like that since he was youngā it had always been Sae that he had looked to for praise, for guidance, for everything.
Even now, Rin couldnāt quite shake that habit, and found his eyes searching for the impossible possibility that Sae had messaged him. He knew that his brother had his numberā it wouldn't make sense for him to not have it, after allā and therefore he knew Sae was ignoring him deliberately.
Still, he looked for a message. Something he found himself doing every morning of every day since Blue Lock. It only disappointed him, lighting a fire under his bubbling resentment for his older brother, but he couldnāt seem to stop.
After he had thoroughly sweeped his messages for any sign of Itoshi Sae and come up with nothing, he circled back to a few messages heād left unchecked.
Isagi had sent him something, a brief āCongratulations on your tie! Looking forward to crushing you next week!ā that Rin didnāt bother to respond to. It was amazing to him how that lukewarm bastard managed to be so confident on the pitch yet so awkward when doing anything else.
Bachira had sent something, too.
āRINNNNNNN!! YOUR GOAL WAS SO PRETYYY ( Ėš·Ė) .į.į I wish I coulda seen it in person :(((ā
The message put a small smile on Rinās faceā he could almost imagine the bubbly joy with which Bachira would've said the words, had they been face-to-face.
He tapped back a quick response, āThanks.ā
A response came almost immediately, āOMG RIN YOU RESPONDED NO WAYYY ( ā¢Ķ૦ā¢Ķ )ā A flurry of texts followed, faster than Rin could respond.
āWAIT OMG!!ā
āWe should hang out while ur in Spain!!ā
āBarcelonaās not too far away by trainā¦ā
āI could take one over to Madrid??ā
Rin hated the way it made his heart raceā hated the way it made him want to say yesyesyesyesyes like some lovesick idiot. Fingers trembling, he took a deep breath and typed out āSure.ā
āYAYYYYY! Later today?ā
Before he could think too hard about it, Rin sent back a quick āWorks for me.ā
āYOU WONT REGRET THIS RINNN!ā
āWhat are you smiling about, licky Rin?ā
Rin flinched, then realized that it was Shidou breathing down his neck and sent an elbow straight into the other strikerās ribs.
āYou stink. Donāt sit next to me.ā He wrinkled his nose in disgust, scooting away from the edge of the bed (where Shidou was lurking) for good measure. There was no way he was letting that cockroach anywhere near him after heād vomited in the sink.
āNot answering me and hitting me? Not nice, rinnie.ā Shidou pouted, āWhen your friends donāt feel good, youāre supposed to be kind.ā
Rin scoffed, not looking up from his phone. He wasnāt doing anything but clicking on random apps, but heād long since learned making eye contact with Shidou would only add fuel to the fireā that is, engage him enough that he wouldnāt stop bothering him anytime soon.
Shidou whined like a kicked dog, pawing at Rinās arms (ew, freak),āRinnnn, say sorryyy.ā
āThe fuckā no? Stop touching me you filthy insect!ā Rin elbowed Shidou again, but the blond just kept poking him, āStop it.ā He paused again, drawing in a deep breath, a scowl overtaking his face, āShidou. Stop.ā Rin said it like one might command a dog. But Shidou wasnāt exactly a tame animalā moreso feralā and he didnāt take the fucking hint.
āIām not even doing anything!ā Shidou held up his hands in mock surrender, as if he was saying āsee, Iām not touching you!ā though heād just been doing it a few seconds before, āPlus, Itās my bed too. Let me up. I wonāt even make us cuddle, I promise.ā He looked at Rin, giving what might've been āpuppy dog eyesāā though they were a lot closer to āferal crusty dog eyesā if you asked Rin.
Shidou blinked, once, twice. A stray eye booger clung to the outter corner of his left eye. āUppies?ā
āWhat the fuck is wrong with you?ā Rin sat for a moment in disbelief, still as a statue, face wrinkled in a combination of disgust and confusion. Mostly disgust.
Apparently seeing that as an opportunity, Shidou hopped up onto the bed and got himself settled before Rin could so much as tell him no.
It was a testament to how far heād come that Rin didnāt immediately kick the blond off the bed. He almost did, then figured Shidou was being respectful enoughā sticking on his side of the bed, no cuddling, as promisedā and left him alone.
The silence that fell between them was almost relaxed, friendly.
Rin was glad for it.
Heād never admit it out loud, but Shidouās presence had become a welcome constant in his life. The other striker was dumb, yes, but he had the sort of brightness to his personality that Rin had always lacked. That Sae had always lacked.
It had lifted Rin out of the storm of his thoughts and brought him back to reality more times than he could count. Often, it happened without him even realizing it. Like earlier, when heād been brooding in the bathroom. Shidou had entered, and suddenly he was caught up in the familiar push and pull of their banter instead of the clouds of his thoughts.
Rin would never thank him, but maybe letting the insect sit next to him on the bed (for now) was enough.
Heād still kick him off if he misbehaved, though.
Shidou hummed as he did⦠whatever the fuck he was trying to do. Turning on the TV, maybe. Though Rin didnāt remember that process involving the infuriating amount of movement Shidou seemed to be making.
āQuit squirming or Iāll kick you off.ā
āOh, for sure,ā Shidou replied, unbothered. His eyes remained trained on the TV. There was a near 100% percent chance that he hadnāt heard a word of what Rin had just said.
There was the telltale sound of buttons clicking before the TV turned on. Immediately sound burst outā an incomprehensible rush of Spanish, accompanied by a symphony of city soundsā that Shidou was, apparently, in no rush to turn down.
Rin kicked him, āHey. Thatās loud.ā He left it unspoken that the roach should turn it down. It was the obvious response to a complaint. But he should've known. Shidou wasnāt ever obvious. (How did he keep forgetting?)
The volume stayed high.
āOi!ā Rin kicked Shidou again, harder. His foot made contact with an eerily still leg. āTurn it down.ā
Shidou didnāt respond, eyes fixed on the TV. The loud Spanish droned onā annoying, like the buzzing of flies. What Rin couldn't understand had always annoyed him.
āShidou, turn it down.ā Frustrated, Rin turned to look at Shidouās face. The man was strangely still, eyes wide as they focused on the TV. Unbidden, Rinās eyes followed his gazeā what could he be so focused on?ā and found what looked like a news broadcast on the screen. āWhy are you watching that? Itās in Spanishāā
His heart dropped as his eyes caught on a singular word. Or, rather, name.
Sae.
What the hell was Saeās name doing on the news?
It had to be about the match. Thatās what would make sense, after all. Or maybeā¦
Rinās heart dropped, his stomach tightening into knots. Maybe it was their fight. He looked at the screen, scrutinizing the words of a language he couldnāt comprehend as if that would help him understand. It didnāt seem like the news anchor was talking about a fight.
It would be ridiculous. No one he saw in the bar had been holding a cameraā and the fight had happened so quickly. It had to be about the match. Not their fight.
He drew a hand across his face, fingers trembling. God, he hoped so. He could only imagine the PR nightmare that would follow if their fight had gone public.
āWhat is it about?ā Rin tapped Shidou on the shoulder, roughly, his phone forgotten in his lap. āShidou, Iām asking you a question!ā Any earlier relaxation in the room had been replaced with the kind of tension that could snap at the slightest pressure.
Shidouās eyes finally ripped away from the TV, āI donāt know Spanish!ā He said it like Rin should be the one figuring things out. But he didnāt know Spanish, either.
āTHEN TRANSLATE IT, I DONāT KNOW??!ā Rin felt something like panic crawling up his throat the longer the stupid news anchor on TV talked. His heart pounded in his ears. What was she talking about? For some reason (he refused to call it fear) he felt that it was important to know.
āMY PHONEāS DEAD!ā Shidou screeched, hands flailing. He looked like he wanted to ask āWhy are we yelling?ā but seemingly thought better of it. A flash of somethingā maybe a memoryā flickered in his eyes. He froze, turned to Rin. āOh.ā
Then, Shidou burst into motion, āUSE YOUR PHONE!!ā
Rin felt a little ridiculous for not thinking of it first (especially considering that his phone was right there in his lap) but complied anyways.
He held up his phone, lining the camera up with theā thankfullyā unmoving headline, and translated the phrase.
Rin blinked. Felt the blood drain from his face.
āWhat does it say?ā Shidou leaned towards him, uncharacteristically quiet.
Rin could only stare at his phone, blinking again.
What the fuck?
It had to be wrong⦠there was no wayā it must've translated wrongā
There was no way.
āRin-chan?ā Shidouās eyes tracked his face, dissecting his expression. He reached forward, slowly, and took the phone from Rinās hands. He seemed surprised by the lack of resistance.
The bugās pink eyes traced the screen of the phone, āāSuperstar Sae Itoshi severelyāā he paused, entire face seizing, before he continued, āāseverely injured in a car crash perpetrated by a drunk driverā?ā
Rin felt his lungs collapse at the statement.
Shidouās mouth was movingā he was saying somethingā but Rin couldn't hear him.
Sae had abandoned him. Discarded him like a child might discard its toy with a simple statement of āI donāt want to play with you anymoreā that was somehow made even harsher by how little it seemed to matter to them.
Heād made it clear how little Rin mattered to him. Heād done it time and time again. On that frozen pitch years ago, after the U-20 match when his eyes had turned to Isagi, and again last night, when heād socked Rin in the face with that sick, cold expression of his.
Sae had meant it all, done it with the calculated precision of a machine, and hadnāt even looked remorseful.
And now⦠now he had the audacity to pull such a stunt? To get himself wrecked in a car accident after heād put Rin down yet another time, physically knocking him down a notch? After heād told him his goalā and by association, he himselfā was fraudulent?
He was going to leave Rin behind againā he always did.
It made Rinās blood boil. It made his heart pound. It made his chest ache. He wanted to gnash his teeth like a wild animal and snarl to the world, Donāt you see? Heās the monster! Not me! Iām still waiting for him! Heās the one leaving me behind!
He felt like he was drowning. He felt like he was falling apart, dissolving into nothingness.
Sae Itoshiā¦
Just hearing his name made Rin angry, made him want to rip his hair out, made him want to shout obscenities. Who did his brother think he was?
Sae Itoshi⦠severely injuredā¦
It made his heart stop to even think of those words in the same context. Sae was untouchable. Sae was unbreakable. He stood at the top of the worldā always just out of Rinās reach.
Sae and injured didnāt belong in the same sentence.
They didnāt belong.
Rinās chest heaved, and he blinked back the fire in his eyes desperately.
⦠car crash⦠drunk driverā¦
There was no wayā
Sae better beā
Rin was going toā
He felt something in his chest crack and shatter into a million pieces.
Sae hadnāt even apologized.
Sae might never apologize.
āRIN!ā
Shidouās voice was loud, overwhelming. Like the bright heat of the sun on a summer evening. It caught the edges of his attention, stopping his mind from spinning and pushed him back to reality.
āRin,ā Warm hands pressed against his shoulders, steadying him as he trembled, āI know Iām shit at this, butā¦ā Shidouās face was close enough that he could smell the acidity of bile on his breath, ā...Look, we donāt know the whole story yet. So⦠it might not be that bad. Itās not like heās dead, or anything.ā
It was all true, but what loomed in Rinās mind was the fact that he could be soon. Even if he hated his brother⦠even if he never wanted to see him again⦠he didnāt want him dead.
The very suggestion of it made him shudder.
āShut the fuck up.ā Rinās voice was dangerously soft.
āRināā
āSHUT UP!ā Rin clenched his fists hard enough that his knuckles turned white. Static buzzed in his ears. He felt insane. āJUST SHUT UP!!ā
āRināā
āFUCKINGāā
Rinās face snapped to the side, neck straining, cheek stinging. He blinked, eyes watering, and turned to stare at Shidou. Had he just⦠slapped him?
āYOUāā
A sun-kissed hand slapped itself over his mouth, muffling the rest of his sentence. The bug it was attached to shook his head like a disappointed mother, tutting, āAh, ah, ah. None of that now, Rin-chan.ā Then Shidouās face dropped into something more serious. āPack your stuff. Iām driving.ā
Rin managed to shove Shidouās hand off his face, āYouāre⦠what?ā It was as if his brain had gone through a factory reset and Shidouās slap had been the catalyst.
Shidou looked at him with a strange expression, his eyes calmer than Rin had ever seen them, āIām taking you to see your brother, Rin.ā
ā¦
It was with shocking speed that they got themselves into the car and on the road. There was an unspoken gravity in the airā something laced with panic and urgency that had both of them functioning on instinct rather than logic.
Theyād both fallen into silenceā even Shidouā and not a comfortable one. A silence that gave away just how dire the situation was.
The car ride was strangely calm. The kind of calm one might find in a graveyardā quiet, eerie.
For once in his life Shidou seemed to be obeying traffic laws, staying a careful five miles per hour within the speed limit. He didnāt say anything, but from the nervous tap of his fingertips against the steering wheel Rin could tell that he, too, was freaking out.
Because that was, after all, what Rin was doing. Freaking out.
With each turn they made through Madridās crowded streets, he watched their ETA tick closer and closer to zero. To their arrival at the hospital. The hospital where his untouchable brother, Sae Itoshi was.
His body felt like it was on autopilot ā hands trembling and legs bouncing with adrenalineā as the world spun by in a weird combo of slow-mo and double-time. He was stuck between thinking time was moving too fast or not fast enough.
The silence became stifling quickly.
Rin felt his emotions like a physical pressure on his lungs, on his shoulders, on his entire body. The entire situation was out of his controlā out of his grasp, out of his understandingā and it made him feel weak. Made him feel just like heād felt when Sae had socked him in the face, when heād called him fraudulent. Made him feel just like heād felt when Sae had abandoned him, naming him the equivalent of a piece of garbage at his feet, on that cold winter night.
āWhy didnāt he call?ā His voice came out reedy, thin. Trembling. The sound of It shocked himā he hadnāt meant to ask the question out loud.
Shidou glanced at him, fingers never stopping their gentle tap, tap, tap against the steering wheel, āI donāt know Rin.ā He paused to focus on the road, turning the car at a steady speed, so careful it made goosebumps raise on Rinās arms. Shidou was never careful. āHeās probably unconscious, after a crash like that.ā
āThe hospital should have at least called.ā Rin insisted, hands twisting together in his lap. His eyes darted to the GPSā five minutes to the hospital. He couldn't tell if that made him feel worse or better.
āWhyās that?ā Shidou asked. His voice sounded strangely clinicalā clipped, like he was just barely able to act like this was a casual conversation and not something to do with Sae Itoshi and a car crash.
Rin barely even registered the questionā his thoughts running a mile a minute. They should have called him.
āOur parents are his emergency contacts, but they wouldn't answer. Theyāre at work. So theyād call me.ā He turned to look at Shidou, for what he didnāt know. āThey wouldāve called me, Shidou. They should've called me.ā
Shidou looked at him, a flash of concern in his gaze, āRin. Iām sure itās fine. Maybe someone else is his emergency contact? If your parents wouldn't answer, theyād be shit emergency contacts.ā
Rin choked on his own breath in his haste to answer, āBut it doesnāt make senseāā
āRin. Are they your emergency contacts?ā The blond strikerās voice was steady. His eyes didnāt leave the road. They didnāt need toā his point came across well enough without eye contact.
Rin felt a rock settle into his stomach, a sinking feeling that had him looking at his lap, ā...No.ā
A voice in the back of his mind still screamed that it didnāt make sense but he knew it was just because he hated that it did.
Even though Sae had his number, why the hell would he have Rin as a back-up to his emergency contact? He despised Rin. He actively looked down on his existence. Had done so the last time theyād interacted. Did so every time they interacted.
What Shidou said pointed out all of thisā that it wouldnāt make sense for a dysfunctional family like the Itoshis to have each other as their emergency contacts. Not just because his parents wouldnāt answer, but because Rin wasnāt good enough to be Saeās emergency contact.
Rin took in a deep, shuddering breath.
Why was Shidou of all people the one explaining things to him? And why was he actually listening and finding it helpful?
It was a testament to how far heād fallen.
Unaware of Rinās inner turmoil, Shidou continued, āYour emergency contact⦠Itās Loki, right?ā Absently, the younger striker nodded along, āSo, Saeās probably got Luna as his emergency contact. Or maybe someone else.ā Shidou took a deep breath, his fingers still tapping against the wheel, āThatās probably why the hospital didnāt call you.ā
āOkay,ā Rin said. The response was automated, empty. His eyes were more focused on their destinationā the looming hospital building in front of themā and the raging storm of his thoughts.
In the past 24 hours, heād come to realize how insignificant he was to Sae. How little importance he held in his older brotherās eyes. But Sae⦠Sae was important to him like blood was important to the body, like air was important to the lungs.
And each and every time Sae stepped on their dream, crushed Rinās fingersā that so desperately reached out to himā with that cold precision of his, Rin came crawling back.
Sae pushed him away.
I donāt need you in my life anymore, Rin.
And Rin came crawling back.
Nii-chan, pleaseā
Every time. Like clockwork.
As Shidou parked the car, Rin felt that this might be the last time. That it might be his last chance to crawl back to his brother and beg him to take him back.
If Sae didnāt⦠If Sae couldnātā¦
Rin didnāt know.
āRinrin, weāre here.ā Shidou poked his shoulder, not unkindly, and took the keys out of the ignition. His seatbelt clicked when he unbuckled it, retracting with a satisfying thunk.
Pink eyes blinked at Rin, expectant, āEarth to Rin,ā He didnāt move.
A hand waved in front of his face, āRiiiin, time to go in.ā
āShut up,ā Rin said, for the umpteenth timeā it seemed to be all he could think of to say instead of āI donāt know what to do. Iām scared.ā
āItās okay, Iāll go with you,ā Shidou patted his shoulder, offering Rin a small grin. It was uncharacteristically gentle.
Rinās head throbbed mercilessly.
āIāll just stay here.ā
āWhat?ā Shidouās eyes widened, and the easy, comforting smile dropped from his face. āRinā¦ā Something crossed over the other strikerās face, a ripple of confusion and maybe disappointment. Rin wasnāt certain, but heād definitely be very disappointed with himself right now. Was disappointed with himself, right now. So itād make sense that Shidou was disappointed.
āRin.ā He said it againā Rin. Not Rinrin or Rin-chan or any other nicknameā like it meant something, like he was serious.
Rin hated that it worked. That it made his panic die down, made his breaths calm, and focused his brain on what would inevitably follow. Because when Shidou said āRinā it meant that he wasnāt joking, that he wanted Rinās attention immediately and in full, that he was about to say something important. Heād said it more this morning than he had in monthsā Rin figured that spoke for itself.
āYour relationship with Sae is roughā¦ā Shidou held up his hands to shush Rin before he could even start to protest, āI know. Understatement of the century. Regardlessā you shouldn't let that stop you from visiting him. Heās in the hospital, Rin. Not to be that guy, but this could be your last chance to talk to him. It probably wonāt beā donāt freak out on meā but still.ā The blond paused, mouth opening and closing ridiculously as he tried (and failed, for at least a solid minute) to find the right words, āHeās your brother.ā
āI know that,ā Rin bit out, trying to pretend like Shidouās stupid speech hadnāt been exactly what he needed. There was something comforting about the bugās honest, tactless approach to motivation and comfort. āShut up and get out of the car.ā
Shidou tossed him a lopsided grinā a little nervous, a little shaky, but genuineā before he did just as Rin asked. And Shidou never listened.
He supposed that the whole situation had knocked them both out of their elementā Rin, out of control and lost in his thoughts when he was usually orderly and focused; Shidou, quiet and obedient when he was usually loud and wild, almost feral.
They were quite a pair, but they worked well together.
It was all he thought about as they walked to the hospitalās entrance: How ridiculously grateful he was for Shidou standing by his side.
ā¦
The hospital was surprisingly calm when they entered.
Rin didnāt know what he had expectedā maybe the rush of nurses and doctors as they tried to save a dying patient, or the eerie stillness of a building full of the sick and injured. It wasn't any of that.
There was simply the quiet buzz of people, as if the hospital were a completely normal place to be, like a grocery store or a restaurant. He supposed this might be true, for some. But heād never been to the hospital before. The environment was foreign and put him on edge.
In a way, it almost reminded him of Sae. Too-clean, strictly ordered, and colorless. He had a brief thought that the hospital was perfect for his brother, then realized it was in ill taste and quickly pushed it away.
Shidou did all the talking, when they approached the front desk.
The lady working there smiled at them, uttering a quick greeting that Rin was too slow to catch. She was a middle-aged woman, with a face that was easy to forget, but seemed kind enough.
Shidou mustāve said something about not speaking Spanish, as the woman had switched to accented English. The language caught at the edges of Rinās attention, and he was struck with a sudden wave of relief that Shidou had become fluent in it. Rin really wasnāt in the mood for talking.
āWho are you visiting today?ā
āSae Itoshi.ā
āOh! Are you family? You look so alike!ā Her eyes darted to Rin, and he knew she was analyzing his eyes and his face, āMy husband is a big fan of Saeās. I was very sorry to hear about his accident.ā She paused to type away at a computer and rattled off some other questions that Rin didnāt hear and Shidou answered.
They had to give their names, show identification, and clarify what they were there for. Just boring formalities.
When she was finally done, she handed them visitor cards and smiled, āFollow the directions I gave you and you should find where he is. If you get lost donāt hesitate to ask for directions. Have a nice day!ā
Rin was already turning to Shidou before sheād finished. Her cheery tone had doubled the pounding in his head. He wanted to say something, maybe āShut up!āā a phrase that he'd become quite fond ofā but he knew she was only trying to be kind. So he bit his tongue and didnāt say a word.
He hadnāt paid attention to any of her instructions when sheād given them. It left him feeling more than a little lost, forcing him to turn to Shidou for directions.
Thankfully, the older striker seemed to be just as present and focused as Rin was absent and drifting.
Shidou thanked the lady at the front desk and marched off to their destination, waving for Rin to follow. He knew better to grab him by the hand, when he was in such a stateā that is, a state where teasing and jokes would lead to violence and yelling.
The sound of their shoes against the linoleum tiles felt loud, even though the buzz of quiet chatter and machines was a constant presence in the air.
Rin followed Shidou mindlessly, feeling a lot like he should've just stayed in the car. It would've been easier than facing his brotherā and whatever state he was in.
For a moment, he thought that itād be easier if Sae was unconscious. Then he wouldnāt have to wither under his brotherās cold gaze, or suffer his biting words. It was a terrible, selfish thought. But he couldn't let go of it, and as Shidou uttered a low, āAlmost there,ā Rin found himself hoping that it were trueā that Sae was unconscious.
Then, he thought himself to be a fool.
Rin might not have a good relationship with Sae, but he knew his brother.
Heād be awake.
Even if he wasn't supposed to beā he would. The doctors would marvel at him.
After all, Sae was the perfect human. Almost robotic in nature.
A few more heartbeats passed, and Shidou stopped. Rin nearly stumbled into him, the motion was so sudden.
āWant me to go in first?ā Shidou offered, quite gently, like Rin was some lukewarm coward who couldnāt even face his own brother. He ignored that there was, in fact, a lot of truth in that line of thought, if that's what the blond was thinking.
Not deigning to respond, Rin pushed open the doorā ignoring the pounding of his blood in his veins, of his heart in his ears, of his brain in his skullā and stepped inside.
His eyes quickly surveyed the roomā noting the odd off-white floor, the machines that whirred and beeped, the curtains shielding the bright light of the windows, the sickly green of the wallsā before finally landing on the center of the room. Where the bed (and thus, his brother) was.
He couldnāt see Sae, just yet.
A man, dressed in a navy-blue sweater and black pants, blocked his view.
At the sound of the door click-ing shut behind themā Shidou had followed quickly behind himā the man turned his head.
āOh! You must be Rin!ā He exclaimed, quite pleasantly, as he adjusted the pair of glasses perched on his nose, āSae-chan, your brother is here.ā
Hearing his brother's name said so casually from a strangerās lips lit a fire under Rinās skin. āSae-chanā? Who even was this man? He could feel his face pulling into a glare.
Shidou glanced at him, concerned.
Rin ignored him and stomped forward, shoving the strange man out of the way to stare at Sae.
He looked frail, sitting thereā upright and awake like Rin knew he would beā with his pale skin, marked by a number of bruises and scrapes. There were bandages on his arms, wrapped around his head, and Rin suspected there were some on his legsā though they were out of sight, tucked neatly under a blanket.
His hair was all fucked up, matted and dirty, rusty in some places like blood had dried and become impossible to wash off completely. His face looked disgusting. It was covered in dark splatters of bruisesā bruises Rin had nearly forgotten heād put thereā and tiny, inconsequential scrapes. That is, except for one gash on his left temple. Even stitched up, it looked bad enough Rin thought it might leave a scar.
But his eyes. They were unchanged. And they looked at Rin with some measure of clarity that he wasnāt sure was possible, for someone who almost surely had a head injury.
Sae didnāt say anything. He didnāt have to. The way he stared at Rinā Like one might stare at a piece of shit on their shoe as if to say āwhy the hell are you here?āā spoke enough.
āWhat the hell is wrong with you?ā The words slipped out of his lips as the thought crossed his mind. Heād come to the hospital, worried, concerned, stressed, only for Sae to look at him like that. Like he was worthless, and had no place there. Fuck that.
The strangerās hands went up nervously, as if his instinct was to mediate, āHeyāā
But Rin wasnāt finished.
He jabbed a finger in Saeās direction, āI found out about this from the news. Want to explain that to me, Sae? Iāā Here, he paused to laugh, the sound almost manic, āI donāt understand. What is your fucking problem? I can understand not calling me for anything elseā but this? Youāve got to be joking.ā His voice shook, rising in volume with each word. He wasnāt quite sure if it was due to rage, fear, sorrow, or a twisted combination of all three. āAnd youāre awake, too. What the fuck were you doing, instead of telling me about this? Twiddling your thumbs? Staring at the goddamn wall? Sitting there, pleased with yourself for leaving me out of the fucking loop?ā
Rin paused to take a breath, realizing in the sudden silence of the roomā broken only by his heaving breathsā that heād been yelling. Loudly.
Saeās eyes were trained on him, unblinking, unreadable. It made him feel sick. He wanted to shout some more, yell at him to stop staring, but his voice was suddenly caught in his throat.
The room fell into a deep quiet.
His brother was the first to break it.
āIā¦ā Saeās voice sounded different than it had last night. Weathered. Rin was horrified to realize it was probably from screamingā or crying. Then he realized the last was a foolish notion. Sae Itoshi didnāt cry.
Sae coughed a little, then tried again, āI donāt have your number.ā The words came out flat, with no inflection. As if he were stating a fact. But Rin knew it was a lie. He knew Sae had his number.
Even though his brother was using that convincing tone of hisā that made it seem like he was the one who was correct, alwaysā Rin knew better.
He opened his mouth to tell Sae that he was lying, that he was a liar and should quit this little game of his, only to be interrupted by the stranger (who had not stopped lurking by Saeās bed).
āPerhaps we should all calm down?ā The man suggested, though his use of āweā felt strangely targeted. āMy name is Dabadieā Iām Sae-chanās manager.ā He held out a hand, presumably for Rin to shake, then lowered it once it became apparent that the younger Itoshi would not be doing so.
āNice to meet you, too. My nameās Shidou,ā Shidou said, quite mildly, in response. He was acting almost polite, as if to make up for Rinās impoliteness. That is, until he tacked on a quick: āIām Sae-chanās demon.ā that was declared so normally one might miss it.
Dabadie didnāt seem to take offense from the statement at all, nor from Rinās silence. He simply adjusted his glasses, looked at Saeā who was staring impassively at the ceiling tiles (and perhaps counting them, for how little he seemed to pay attention to the conversation)ā and sighed, deeply, as if he were questioning his career.
His eyes found Rinās, almost suddenly, āI can already tell that you and your brother are very much alike.ā
Rin hated the way the words speared his heart, stalled his lungs, and added to the storm of his emotions.
Him and Sae, very much alike?
He would have given up every little bone in his body to be told such a thing when he was younger. Now, he might even give up his dominant, right leg to simply hear the words from Saeās lips.
The effect of the phrase was both poisonous and addictive.
On one hand, it gave Rin a rush of guilty pleasure to be associated with Sae in such a small manner. He wanted to hear it said again, wanted to ask why so that he could hear the similarities between him and his brother. But most of all, he wanted to prompt the admittance that they both played exquisite soccer.
On the other hand, it made him sick to think that he was tied to Sae. To think of the way that they were stuck together, bound together, by their blood. To think that he was the younger Itoshiā the second Itoshi, the lesser Itoshiā to Saeās older, first, greater.
But the worst realization was that Dabadie probably meant they had similar personalities. That he was being associated with Sae like a teacher might associate a younger sibling with their older brotherās bratty behavior.
He wasnāt cold, like Sae. He wasnāt heartless. He wasn't robotic, or cruel.
Such a claim was simply false.
āWhat?ā Rinās voice came out sharp, defensive. He could see Saeās lukewarm manager shiver under his gaze and look to Sae, as if that creature would do anything to help him. Sae didnāt help. He destroyed things beautifully. Like it was an art and not a terrible crime. It was what he was good at.
He had, after all, destroyed Rin so beautifully on that winter night. The snow-fall had been so divine, with each snowflake shining in the artificial light like diamonds. As if the world had recognized what Sae was about to do and had set the stage for him.
Rin was about to repeat himselfā louder, sharperā when Shidouās hand came down on his shoulder. The older strikerās nails dug into his skin even through the shirt, his fingers squeezing hard enough to leave marks. The small act of violence was enough to snap Rinās attention away from Dabadie, away from Sae, and towards the stupid cockroach.
From Shidouās small smirk, Rin could tell that was what he intended all along. To drag Rinās attention onto him and away from starting another argument.
Saeās eyes burned into them both, analyzing.
āOkay, rinrin. Cool it. Leave the poor man alone.ā Shidou rolled his eyes before shaking his head and staring pointedly at Dabadie. The look seemed to say: āItoshis, am I right?ā
The man laughed nervously and seemed like he didn't understand. He probably didnāt, honestly. Shidou was a tough nut to crack. It took a while to get used to the patterns of his behaviors (or lack thereof).
Rin was sorry to say that heād been around the roach long enough that he could decipher almost every action and reaction the blond made.
āSoooooā¦ā Shidou began, drawing the sound out childishly, āHowāre ya feeling, Sae-chan? Any crazy injuries?ā His voice sounded cheerful, and he seemed to be mostly back to normalā if Shidouās regular state could be considered ānormalāā save for the nervous taps of his fingers against Rinās shoulder.
It was telling that he hadnāt moved his hand from Rinās shoulder even after relaxing it. Shidou was a man who sought contact, especially when he was anxious.
The room fell into silence for the nth time, as they all waited on Saeās response. The midfielder was looking at Shidou, with an odd look in his eyes. The bug merely blinked back at him, waiting.
Saeās voice sounded small when he finally spoke, āIām fine.ā
It didnāt sound convincing.
Even to Rin.
And Rin excelled at falling for his brotherās lies.
āReally?ā Shidou replied. He sounded so hopeful that Rin almost nailed him in the ribs and asked him if he was really that stupid.
Sae nodded.
It looked jerky. Robotic. Scripted. Fake.
Dabadieās shoes squeaked nervously against the floor, and the man adjusted his glasses again. It seemed to be a frequent habit of his.
āSae-chan.ā The man admonished, like a parent might scold their child. Rin waited for Sae to snap at him to shut up, but he only stared at his hands silently. āTell them.ā
And although Sae didnāt have toā there was no law binding him to share his diagnosisā he opened his mouth and did.
āMy left leg,ā Sae uttered, softly enough that they all had to quiet to listen, but not so soft as to sound meek, āIt was shattered.ā At this, he moved the blankets to the side, exposing his left leg andā the sight made Rinās heart stop. It was, like he said, broken. A white cast surrounded it like a tomb. His brotherās dominant leg, broken. No, shattered.
But it doesnāt look so bad, Rin thought. Itāll heal up fine.
āOh.ā Sae exhaled, gently, as if heād forgotten something simple, āAnd the surgeon said they did their best, but Iāll never play soccer again. I may struggle to walk, even.ā His voice was void of all emotion and any intonation. Like it didnāt matter. Like it didnāt change everything.
It pissed Rin off. More than anything had ever pissed him off before.
Saeās life was soccer.
Rinās memories of his brother had always been accompanied by the black-and-white of the boyās soccer ball. He was stuck to it like glue, and it was all he talked about.
Rin, Heād say, with that sparkle in his eye, come watch me play!
And Rin would say, Okay! and watch him. There was something special in watching Sae work his magic, in seeing his brother on the field and being able to say āThatās my nii-chanā to impressed spectators.
Soccer became even more special when theyād started to play together.
Sae and Rin, Rin and Sae.
The unstoppable Itoshi brothers.
They were perfect together.
But soccer changed, for Sae, after Spain. Heād become better, stronger, and smarter than Rin. Had risen Leagues above him.
And heād decided that Rin was worthless to him.
Heād ruined everything.
Beautifully. Concisely.
And nowā now Sae had the audacity to act like soccer didnāt mean anything to him?
Like losing his leg wasnāt equivalent to losing his life?
It made Rin seethe, āIāā He took a deep breath, felt his anger burn like lava in his throat, in his lungs. Shidouās hand was heavy where it sat on his shoulder. He opened his mouth again, to speak, but no words came out. He was at a loss.
Sae stared at him, blinking his fucking dead fish eyes slowly, like he hadnāt just said his career was over, his dreams crushed forever, and his life ruined beyond repair.
It made his anger falter and fade into something worse. Something weaker.
His eyes burned with it, his throat closing up, his lungs seizing. He must've been trembling, for Shidouās hand tightened to steady him and the man gave him a concerned look.
Saeās eyes remained on him. He raised a single eyebrow, like he was asking a question.
It was embarrassing, to be dissected so thoroughly. To be understood so easily.
Rin muttered an excuseā something along the lines of Iāll be back, going to call our parentsā that he didnāt hear as it left his mouth.
No one stopped him as he exited the room.
The door clicked shut.
He let out a shuddering breath, squeezing his eyes shut.
I want to go home.
I want my mom.
The thoughts were infantile, lukewarm. But he couldnāt stop them.
It didnāt matter that Sae had been more of a parent to him than his mother had ever beenā humans were, after all, animals, and there was something instinctual in a childās bond to its mother.
And it really was instinct, not logic, that drove Rinās next actions.
For logic wouldāve told him that calling his mother would amount to nothing. That she wouldn't answer because she never did.
But the impressionable, childlike part of his brainā to which he was reduced in such a moment of fear (for it was fear he had truly felt upon learning of Saeās injury)ā had hope that she would. Maybe sheād even offer a word of comfort, saying to him: āIām so sorry, Rin-chan. Are you going to be alright? You can stay with us for a while, if you need to.ā
Rin picked up his phone and dialed her number.
In the not-quite-silence of the hospital, he stood, and waited as the phone rang.
He felt his heart pounding in his chest, and hoped beyond reason that sheād answer.
He just wanted her to answer.
The phone kept ringing.
Rin didnāt look at the time. It would tell him something he didnāt want to know.
He kept his eyes on his phone.
It rang a couple more times, the buzz of it traveling through his fingers, into his bones.
Then it stopped.
He tried again, felt his fingers begin to tremble as it rang, and rang, and rang.
There was no answer.
Rinās breath was loud to his own ears as he attempted to call for a third time.
He could barely see the contact on his phoneā simply labeled momā through the tears blurring his vision.
A few heartbeats passed.
He nodded awkwardly as a nurse walked by.
The call failed.
Rinās heart shattered for what felt like the tenth time since heād woken up.
Heād known she wouldnāt call. Heād known.
But the fact that she hadnātā it still hurt anyway.
Just like it still hurt that Sae was so cold, that he wouldnāt apologize, that he didnāt care, even though Rin expected it from him.
Standing there, in the hospitalās hallway, Rin began to cry.
He cried violentlyā sobbing in a way that shook his entire body and left no air in his lungs to breatheā leaving a sick feeling in his stomach that made him want to puke.
He shuddered, gasping, tears streaming down his face.
He simply cried.
Alone.
He was back where Sae had left him, when he was just 11 years old.
Kneeling on the ground, pleading and crying with thin air to stop.
Because he hadnāt been crying to Sae for more than a few seconds. His older brother had walked away without a single backwards glance, ignoring him completely. And his cries had soon echoed into the void of the night, with naught but the stars to hear them.
Sae had left him then.
Now heād left him again.
But this time, it was almost certainly for good.
Sae Itoshi, Japanās Prodigy, would not return to the pitch.
He might heal, but even then heād be weaker. Lesser. Secondary.
Just a midfielder from Japan. Or perhaps the āFormer Geniusā.
A rotten, bitter voice whispered that heād finally be beating his brother.
Are you happy now? It hissed, This is what you wanted, isnāt it?
Rin only cried harder because he knewā recalling all the times heād screamed for Sae's death and swore heād do anything to see Saeās downfallā that this was exactly what heād begged for.
And he didnāt want it anymore.
Notes:
I genuinely believe that Rin and Saeās whole relationship fell apart due to a big misunderstanding.
I think Sae believes what heās doing is helping Rin and that itās for his own good, while Rin sees it as a deliberate, hateful act against him for being ānot good enoughā.
I also think Rin does not hate Sae so much that he wants him deadā he just says he does and kinda gaslights himself into acting like it's what he wants. He still loves his brother, and still searches for his approval, but at the same time he hates him for being so cruel (which I would hate him for, too, ngl).
I tried to convey this complexity so far, though Iām not sure how well it's going. Hopefully the dual perspectives are helpful.
Chapter 3
Summary:
The chattering of the two men quieted, falling into whispers.
A machine whirred loudly.
Sae was barely able to make out their next words.
Ā
ā... surgery went well. His legā¦ā
Ā
āThatās good⦠payment is⦠do you think⦠possibleā¦ā
Ā
ā... uncertain. He may never⦠again. The⦠shatteredā¦ā
Ā
āI see. Would⦠aid him⦠recovery?ā
Ā
ā... may not⦠if he can⦠the pain⦠and⦠have to waitā¦ā
Ā
Footsteps sounded closeby, and their voices shifted further away until they became so soft he couldn't hear them, once more.
Notes:
This took me wayyy longer to post than i wanted it to because school is DIABOLICAL.
writing this fic is the only thing keeping my dopamine levels high enough that i dont crash out ššš
pls dont fact check me i tried to keep it semi-accurate but iām not a doctor
tysm for reading!!
HONORABLE MENTION TO MY POOKIE BACHIRA (despite him not appearing in the fic yet) BC WHYS HE SO ADORABLE LIKE OMGGGG
sorry if there's any grammar mistakes, I tried to catch them all but i'm sure i missed some!
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
The first time Sae woke up it was with a fitful start and a plea stuttering halfway from his lips, a garbled imitation of āIām sorry!ā echoing throughout the room.
His heart was hammering, instincts urging him to run from a danger that was no longer present. His hands clenched in the sheets of the bedā it was the only movement his body could bear, with all its aches and pains.
Sae took a bracing breath, to calm himself. It caught in his throat and he coughed roughly, once, twice, the effort sending dull pain shooting from his ribs to his entire body. He clutched at his side and let out a low groan, blinking back tears.
A nurse who had been standing nearby rushed to his side. Her hand was gentle against his back as she eased him back against the pillows and murmured things he didnāt register.
His head felt filled with cotton, each sensation oddly different in a way that he could just barely recognize and not quite grasp. It made his eyes hurt.
A machine beeped steadily in the background.
The nurse said something more to him. He nodded as if heād heard, but he was too stunned to grasp anything other than the word ādoctorā.
She gave him a glass of water, examined a couple machines and noddedā with what seemed to be approval, or satisfactionā before leaving.
Sae didnāt touch the water, regardless of the burning dryness in his throat.
His entire body felt fuzzy and sore. Exhaustion pulled at his eyes, aided by the dim light of the room.
It wasnāt long before he fell into darkness again.
ā¦
The second time he woke, it was to the gentle murmur of voices.
He felt calm, but in a strange, quiet kind of way.
It was a calm filled with unspoken possibilities of winning or losingā or ending in a draw, which was somehow worse in a variety of ways. The type of calm that created an atmosphere that was not panicked, but also not peaceful. Such that your thoughts whispered that you were going to lose something with a rationality that left little room for emotion.
It was the kind of calm that hung in Re Alās locker room before an important match, each player tense and on edge as if ready for a battle theyād long trained for, knowing that even in victory there would be loss. Knowing that even those on the winning team could suffer in victory, falling behind the prowess of their teammates and landing themselves on the bench. A tie, in every sense of the word. A position not-quite-lost but also not-quite-won.
Sae felt this type of calm keenly. A not-quite-loss but also a not-quite-victory. An unsettled calm. Heād survived the car crashā heād wonā but heād also been injuredāheād lostā and so, heād ended the night in a draw.
Something in the air shifted. The murmurs grew a little louder, enough that they reached his ears, quite clearly.
āYou are right to be worried, but heās very stable as of now. The crash was bad, but the driver caught most of the impact.ā The person who spoke had a deep voice, soft but firmā Sae thought it might be a doctor, with the way he was speaking.
The man continued after a brief pause, during which there was the rustling of what might've been papers, āMr. Itoshi has a concussion, but the damage is limited and shouldn't affect him long-term. What we really need to discuss is the treatment for his other injuries, but weāll wait until heās awake.ā Here his voice faded away, though it seemed intentional, as he soon prompted someone with a quiet: āDo you have any questions?ā
The voice that replied was strangely familiar, āNo, thank you. Iām just glad to hear heāll be okay.ā
āHeāll recover,ā The doctor clarified, āBut there may be complications and it will be a long process. I must warn you to be prepared for setbacks.ā
The other man hummed, āI understand. I was just.. it was hard to hear that Sae-chan hadāā Here he broke off, sounding choked by emotion, and it became clear to Sae who was speaking. It was his manager, Dabadie. He had forgotten to count Dabadie, his trusty emergency contact, in the list of the few people who called him by that nickname.
Before the crash, at the bar, heād limited that honor to Shidouā who didnāt know when he should shut the fuck upā though in truth both his mother and Dabadie called him Sae-chan, as well. He simply thought of their use of his childhood nickname more fondly. In Shidouās mouth it was made foul. In his motherās, in Dabadieās, it was soothing.
The conversation between the doctor and Dabadie continued.
āSorry.ā Dabadieās voice was tight, a little watery. He sounded exhausted. It made Sae feel like shit. He wanted to say something, though he wasnāt sure what, but weariness kept him still, pulling at his limbs with a vengeance.
The doctorās voice was closer when he next spoke, āDon't apologize. Itās natural to be upset, even if the patient is doing well.ā
The chattering of the two men quieted, falling into whispers.
A machine whirred loudly.
Sae was barely able to make out their next words.
ā... surgery went well. His legā¦ā
āThatās good⦠payment is⦠do you think⦠possibleā¦ā
ā... uncertain. He may never⦠again. The⦠shatteredā¦ā
āI see. Would⦠aid him⦠recovery?ā
ā... may not⦠if he can⦠the pain⦠and⦠have to waitā¦ā
Footsteps sounded closeby, and their voices shifted further away until they became so soft he couldn't hear them, once more.
The room fell back into its still not-calm.
Sae was too tired to think very hard about what theyād said, beyond the fact that it didnāt sound like heād won the lottery of accidents. Something was wrong. But he was so, so exhausted, and the pain medication curbed the anxiety that he supposed he should've been feeling.
It wasnāt long before he was asleep again.
ā¦
When Sae woke for the third time, it was to blinding pain in his skull. Bright light warmed his face and sent daggers straight into his eyes, even through the eyelids. His head throbbed mercilessly, a pressure building behind his eyes that had him wondering if theyād simply pop out of his skull.
His head twisted to the side, reflexively moving away from the light. It didnāt help much. Despite the pain, he opened his eyes halfway, an arm coming up to shield them from the worst of the light. A groan escaped his throat before he was able to swallow the sound.
Footsteps echoed throughout the room, clack-ing hurriedly.
āMr. Itoshi?ā A young womanās voice asked, gently. A hand went to shake his shoulder. He forced his eyelids completely open to blink at her. His face scrunched up in a mixture of pain and confusion, the arm in front of his face wavering.
The nurse moved from his side briefly, and there was the sound of curtains being slid shut. The light faded away into something more bearable. His head still pounded, but it no longer felt like it was becoming exponentially worse.
āMr. Itoshi, is that better?ā The nurse had walked back to his bedside, and appeared to be in her late thirties.
āYes.ā Sae blinked and took a deep breath, āWhyā Where didā What happened?ā The question stumbled inelegantly out of his mouth. His thoughts were running faster than his body could keep up, asking more questions than it was possible to voice.
The nurse folded her hands neatly in front of herself and spoke in a rather polite manner, āYou were in a car crash, Mr. Itoshi.ā
āYes,ā Sae said. The word came out flat, inexpressive. Like he was simply agreeing with a fact. And he was.
He could remember the flashes of the crashā the sharp, stinging pain of his head against the glass, the agony in his leg, bad enough that his entire body tensed upā and he remembered the driver.
That poor driver.
His hand, dripping scarlet.
His body, unmoving, quiet.
Sae hadnāt dared to glance too long at him, for fear of what he might see. He couldn't even remember what the manās face looked like.
The thought had him shaken, and it was near impossible for him to stop thinking about that poor driverā even though heād just woken up around 10 minutes ago.
But most of allā above his injuries, above the tragedy of the driverā he remembered Rin.
And his little brother hadnāt even been there.
Yet Sae couldn't stop thinking about him, as that melody played in the background, as his world spun rapidly even after the car had stopped flipping.
He remembered the bar. That floating, absent feeling of having too much to drink. Shidouās bubblegum eyes, blinking at him. Rinās face, emerging from the crowd, twisted in disbelief and anger.
He remembered yellingā sharp, loud, cutting wordsā that echoed in his ears. The exact words escaped him, but Rinās distress and rage were clear.
He remembered saying something to him. Something cruel. Something necessary. Rin had punched him in response, and Sae had punched him right back.
He remembered Rinās eyes glimmering with unshed tears, his nose broken, his face already bruising, his body trembling as if under duress, his hands beaten and bloody, and his voice as he cried.
He remembered the way Rin had taunted him, after. Each word had been all bark and no bite. Of course, there had been a bite when Rinās fist had met Saeās face, but his eyes werenāt filled with hate, like Sae had expected.
Rin had been looking at him with those eyesā the eyes he turned to Sae as if begging for him to look at himā and it had broken Saeās heart.
Heād thought more than twice about the words leaving his mouthā he wasnāt oblivious, he knew exactly what he was doingā but the cost was worth it. They were for Rinās benefit, afterall. If Sae had to make his brother hate him for him to succeed as a striker, heād do it. He had done it. He was doing it.
But heād regretted throwing that punch the moment his fist had snapped Rinās nose.
Theyād never gotten physical before, outside of soccer. And that was merely pushing and shoving. The solid punch Sae had thrown was worlds away from that.
It was different.
It was visceral, the feeling of boneā His baby brotherās boneā cracking under the force of his fist. It had sent a shiver down his spine, made a sick feeling bubble up his throat, and had stopped his body in its tracks.
He remembered stopping, for a second. Hesitating. Not-quite stepping forward but also not-quite standing still.
It came to him, then, what exactly heād meant to do, in that lull after the punch.
The word had been on his lips.
The action had been in the forefront of his brain.
But Sae was too scared to say it. Too scared to say that he was sorry. That he didnāt mean it. That it was all a lie. That Rinās goal had been divine, not fraudulent.
Yet⦠If he had said all that he meantā that he was sorryā what had all of his efforts been for?
The thought had held him back.
He had been doing this for too long to quit now. He had to wait until the time was right. Maybe when heād healed. Maybe once Rin had won the World Cup. Once heād reached his full potential.
Sae ignored the shame that built up in his chest, hot and uncomfortable, at the knowledge that heād promised Luna heād apologize.
Heād promised people a lot of things. Himself. Rin. Luna. Shidou.
Sae had come to detest promisesā the binding nature of telling someone youād do something, be something, win something, because you promisedā and how illogical they were. Promises were built on nothing but hopes and dreams. Promises were childish. Promises didnāt make you a better striker. Promises didnāt make talent. Promises were meant to be broken. Promises were weak.
If only Rin could understandā
Promises werenāt meant to last.
Their promise wasnāt meant to last.
It was just a poor facade masking the truth of reality, a childish dream that would never survive in the face of true soccer.
He came back to reality at the gentle clearing of the nurseās throat. She was regarding him with an odd lookā one that made him shrink back into his pillows, feeling a lot like a specimen under a microscope.
āWell, Mr. Itoshi, the crash was pretty severe. Iāve just called for the doctor. He should be here to explain everything in depth for you momentarily.ā The nurse smiled at him, politely, though she seemed to be pitying him, a little. āAny questions? Concerns?ā
Sae looked at her for a moment, āMy head hurts.ā The nurse looked at him like she expected him to elaborate. He didn't. What heād said was clear enough.
āThat would be the concussion. Common side effects include headaches.ā She explained, then paused to ask: āAnything else?ā
āNo.ā
āAlright, then.ā She gave him one last glance before turning towards the machines tucked next to the bed. They hummed quietly, filling the otherwise silent air with noise.
Sae sunk into his pillows and sighed.
Was it wrong that he was already wishing he could just go back to sleep?
A part of him (that sounded a lot like Rin) taunted him: Trying to run away again?
And it was undeniable that he wanted to run, that he would have run.
Except with each passing moment the weight of exhaustion pressed its hands more heavily onto his shoulders, and the sharp pain in his left leg increased.
Heād almost forgotten about itā his leg.
But now, it was practically screaming for his attentionā yelling that it was hurtā so much that the throbbing of his head began to pale in comparison.
And Sae knew, suddenly, that there wouldnāt be any running, this time.
ā¦
By the time the doctor entered the room, Sae was drained. He hadnāt even done anything, and his leg was killing him, his head was killing himā and, fuck it, who was he kidding? Everything was killing him.
The nurse had given him more painkillers a few moments ago, but they had yet to kick in.
āIt still hurts.ā Heād said, shortly after sheād put the medicine into his IV drip.
Sheād fixed him with a long-suffering look, one that asked him if heād ever lived a day on earth.
Sae had been too embarrassed to admit that he had absolutely no knowledge of medicine. Re Alās team doctor simply took care of that for him. And Dabadie, his manager, handled all his appointments, all the instructions.
After sighing deeply, the nurse had said āIt will take a while before you feel the effects, since I just gave it to you.ā
āGive me more.ā
āAre youāā Sheād sighed again, the unspoken āKidding me?ā petering off into nothing as she blinked at him, astonished yet trying to remain professional, āIām afraid I canāt do that, Mr. Itoshi. Iāve already administered the recommended dose. I assure you it will kick in soon.ā
Soon? Heād thought. Fuck that.
But he hadnāt had a chance to say anything more, as the doctor had arrived.
āHow are you today, Mr. Itoshi?ā The doctor asked. His voice snapped Sae back to reality. It was quiet yet serious. The man himself seemed to be around forty or fifty years old. He carried himself with a kind of relaxed confidence that told Sae heād been working at the hospital for a long time.
Unfazed by any lack of response, the man smiled and continued to speak, āLooking better than the last time I saw you.ā
ā... Get to the point already.ā Sae said, before he could stop himself.
If the doctor was offended by his response, he didnāt show it, āOkay, then! Thereās a lot we need to go over with you. Iāve already discussed things with your manager, but itās very important that you understand your situation.ā
āMy manager?ā He blinked a little, feeling sluggish.
The doctor nodded, slowly, āYes. He was here earlier.ā His fingers tapped gently against a clipboard Sae only just realized he was holding. āHe was contacted right after your crash. Iāve already discussed your condition with him, as well as the costs of your stay.ā
Sae hummed, somewhere in the back of his throat, āWhere is he.ā Heād meant to add more inflection to his voice, but it had fallen flat and had come out as a statement rather than a question.
āI believe he went to grab lunch, but he should be back shortly. Heās been told that youāre awake.ā The man smiled at him, gently, reassuring.
Sae just nodded absently to show he was listening. Heād almost forgotten that Dabadie was his emergency contact. It was nice to know he was here, in the hospital. That heād be back.
The doctor cleared his throat, āNow, Mr. Itoshi, letās discuss your injuries. Would you like me to start with the good news, or the bad news?ā The manās eyes flickered across the pages on his clipboard, fingers tapping absently as he waited for a response.
Sae drew in a slow, deep breath, blinking.
Part of him wanted to ask the doctor to leave. Tell him that he didnāt want to know anything at allā good news or bad news. Because any news was bad.
And despite the pain he was feeling (Which had dulled significantly. The nurse wasnāt lying when she had said the medicine would kick in soon.) there was something secure in not knowing what it meant.
Yes, it hurt, but for now it was an unlabeled hurt.
It meant nothing.
But a diagnosis?
It wasnāt a reality that he could run from. That he could pretend didnāt exist.
And that scared him.
He didnāt want to hear what he suspected might fall from the doctorās mouth.
He didnāt want to hear that he couldnātā
Because what was he withoutā
Saeās breath stuttered. A machine spiked along with his heartbeat.
He couldnāt bear to think about it.
The doctor gave him a pitying lookā it made his insides twist with something rotten that made him want to rip his skin offā and stilled his page-flipping, āGood news, then.ā
He paused for a moment.
Sae hated the way his eyes darted to the machine tracking his pulseā with readings high enough to expose his stress, despite his efforts to keep a calm exterior. It felt a little like how he imagined having oneās mind read might feelā violating, embarrassing, repulsive.
āOverall, your injuries are surprisingly mild. A moderate concussion, bruises and scrapes, a couple broken ribs, and some minor swelling. Most of this should disappear within a few weeks, and even the concussion will resolve itself within a similar time period.ā The doctor smiled, as if to say āisnāt that just wonderful?ā, before he continued, āThe force of the crash was mostly absorbed by the front of the car. One might say you are quite lucky, Mr. Itoshi!ā
The midfielder frowned.
Lucky? Him?
He had the sudden urge to ask the doctor if he was talking to the right patient.
Lucky and Sae Itoshi didnāt belong in the same sentence.
Unbothered by his lack of joy, the doctor kept speaking, āThere is one issue, though. The bad news.ā He frowned, and the expression on the doctorās face had Sae tensing, unbidden.
Was it really that bad?
āI know soccerās important to youā¦ā
He felt his heart drop into his stomach. The beeping of his heart rate spiked, and he could see the way it made the nurse (who was still lurking close by) tense, too.
The doctor sighed, deeply, and looked at Sae with a serious expression, āI regret to inform you that your left leg was fractured quite severely in the accident. Our surgeons did their best to repair it, but you wonāt be playing soccer anytime soon. Perhaps not even in the future. You may even struggle to walk. Youāll have to undergo an extensive recovery process.ā
The words turned Saeās world upside down.
The doctorās voice sounded muffled, as if Sae were being spoken to through a layer of cotton instead of air.
He felt himself inhale.
ā⦠years of physical therapyā¦ā
He exhaledā unsteadyā and the action seemed to take not just the carbon dioxide out of his lungs but also his mind out of his body.
His fingertips felt fuzzy. The doctorās voice faded, drowned by a ringing in his ears. His heartbeat thundered its symphony in his ears, thrumming like a ticking bomb within his chest.
It felt like a switch had been pressedā a wire cut, a plug pulledā as his heart started to tick, tick, tick towards explosion.
Sae hadnāt really expected it.
He supposed he should have. It was his leg. He felt the way it throbbed unnaturallyā more painful than any sprain, strain, or tear heād felt before. He should've known it wasnāt just an issue with his tendons, his muscles, his joints.
But to hear it so plainlyā
To hear that his left leg, his dominant leg, was shattered?
Not broken. Not fractured. Not snapped. Shattered.
Shattered like his motherās fine china, when Rin had teetered on a stool to reach the āpretty platesā tucked high away in a cabinet. Sae could still remember the way his heart had stopped, when heād heard the unmistakable sound of porcelain dashing against the floor and his brotherās cries.
He could still remember Rin standing on a stool, surrounded by a sea of tiny pieces of sharp milky-white glass. Heād been sobbing so harshly Sae had feared heād fall and cut his body to pieces.
He could still remember Rinās tiny voice, āIā mamaās gonna b-be soāā He had sniffled, breathless and red-faced from his cries, āmad at me.ā
And the plate had been truly broken beyond repair.
It had been shattered.
Sae sucked in a breath, lungs seizing.
Would he really be unable to play?
ā...the pain⦠chronicā¦ā
The doctorās voice droned on in the background and with each passing word Sae felt his heart pound further and further towards explosion.
He could remember the first time heād played soccer.
His first contact with the sport had been a local match between two Japanese teams. Why his parents had even taken him there, he wasnāt sure, but that didnāt matter. The entire experience was colored in a light and joy that only came from childhood memoriesā everything had just seemed so much better at that age, more interesting and new. More alive.
The pitch had been bright green, the lights an unforgiving white. The players had looked like ants on the field, they were so far away. It was hot, and not the forgiving type of heat. The summer sun beat down on them with a vengeance. Sae could barely see between the rows of seats, filled with warm bodies much bigger than his own. None of it had mattered once the whistle blew, starting the kick-off.
Sae had been enamored. With as much excitement as his small body had been able to contain, heād sat on the edge of his seat and watched the entire match.
Each pass had been precise, as if the ball followed a rhythm only the players could conduct. It had tap-ped audibly against their cleats, the sound in and of itself almost like music.
Never had something seemed so beautiful to him before.
Sae had gotten his first soccer ball that week, then his first cleats, and then his first uniform.
And the feeling of the ball under his foot had been heaven.
And nowā
Nowā
ā...retirement is probably⦠best optionā¦ā
Sae trembled, looked down at his lap to see his hands fisted in the sheetsā hands that he knew were attached to his arms but didnāt feel like his, anywayā and his legs, covered by the thin blankets.
He felt a rush of bitterness flood his mouth, a mix of anger and the sharp tang of bile.
Retirement?
Players retired in their thirties, at the earliest. Some even lasted until their forties.
Sae was twenty three.
He still had at least seven years left of playing soccer.
It was all he knew, he couldnāt just stopā
He didnāt deserveā
No. He knew that this was all his fault, that all those years looking down on players, looking down on Rin, were catching up to him.
That he was just a colossal asshole finally getting the punishment he was due for.
That this was the universeās final blow.
He wouldn't have cared, if it had been anything else.
An eye. A hand. An arm.
His life.
But soccerā
ā...Iām truly sorryā¦ā
Was Sae Itoshi really Sae Itoshi if he wasnāt playing soccer?
He certainly wasnāt a genius at anything else.
All his life, itād been soccer. Sleep, eat, soccer, repeat. He hadn't paid attention in school. Heād barely attended. His grades had been worse than piss-poor. He wasnāt even sure how heād remained on the teamā that was a lie. It was because there hadnāt been anyone betterā and at the time, he hadnāt given a single thought to it.
All heād ever thought about was soccer, soccer, soccer.
It had almost made his heart burst when Rin had expressed interest in the sport, too. And when his teammates had muttered in annoyance, heād not hesitated to tell them to back off. Because there was nothing in the world better than playing soccer as the lesser half of the Itoshi Brothers.
Heād been so happyā
Heād been so freeā
ā...you⦠beautifully⦠last matchā¦ā
Sae choked on an exhale. Felt his body float somewhere between reality and nothing. He blinked.
He saw the arch of Rinās goal, burning behind his eyelids.
Heād said it was fraudulent. Near-perfect, but sub-par.
What he hadnāt said was that it was elegant despite its flaws. That he had seen Rinās improvement, his talent.
What he hadnāt said was that his eyes and his brain had just barely followed the shot, just barely predicted its course, and just barely kept up.
What he hadnāt said was that heād always been looking at Rin.
What he hadnāt said was sorry.
ā... good ending⦠careerā¦ā
Sae shook his head. Felt a few words leave his lips, muffled, āIām not quitting.ā
Heād meant it to be a statement, but his voice came out desperate and trembling in a tone he couldn't quite connect to his own body.
He didnāt sound like himself.
Sae didnāt feel like himself, either, as the doctorās gaze softened with pity. The man said something that was probably meant to be reassuring. He didnāt listen.
Instead, he kept repeating the phrase like a prayer in his head: Iām not quitting, Iām not quitting, Iām not quitting.
As if it could stop the inevitableā because it was inevitable. His leg was already shattered. Theyād already tried to glue it back together. But something shattered didnāt just get put back together. Shattered meant beyond repair. Shattered meant tiny, ill-fitting pieces that would never find their place again.
He thought of his motherās fine china. Thought of his bleeding fingers after heād triedā and failedā to piece the shattered plate back together. His mother had been so mad.
And Rinās face had been so pale. Stained with tears and bloodless, heād been struck by silence as their mother had asked in a too-calm voice, āWho broke it?ā
Rin had trembled, eyes blown wide, half-caught between sobbing and speaking, āMamaāā
Sae hadnāt been able to bear such a look on his baby brotherās face.
So heād taken the blame.
Sae barely noticed the doctor excusing himself from the room, the door clicking shut. Barely noticed the nurse fiddling with his IV, checking machines.
Because what was Rin going to do, when he found out about his leg?
He already knew the answer.
Rin would be devastated.
And somehow, that was worse than anything else.
ā¦
When Dabadie finally entered the room Sae felt numb. The truth of his reality had sunk in, and it left no room for sorrow, or even anger. He simply felt blank, like he had been rebooted. In a sense, he had. Soccer wasā or, he corrected himself had beenā his life. It had been the baseline for everything heād ever done. Without it, heād be forced to rebuild from the ground up. The task was exhausting to think of. So he had chosen to think of nothing, and had simply stared at the sickly green walls of the hospital room.
āSae-chan!ā Dabadieās voice sounded choked with tears. Sae didnāt have it in him to look at the manās face, a sudden rush of guilt overwhelming him. Heād been wallowing in his own misery while Dabadie had been worrying away for who-knows-how-long.
Unaware, Dabadie continued forward until he was right next to Sae. There was a chair for visitors nearby, but he didnāt sit down. It was with relief that he finally spoke again, after a few moments of silence, āIām so glad youāre awake! When they called me last night, I feared the worst.ā
Again, Sae responded with silence. His eyes flickered from the wall to the linoleum tiles of the floor. His hands twisted in his lap.
Dabadieās kindness was like a bullet straight to his heartā unexpected and fatal. He didnāt know what to do with it. He hadnāt even thought that someone mightāve shown up for him, until the doctor had mentioned talking to his manager.
The thought that Dabadie had even been inconvenienced with such a call made him feel embarrassed.
Afterall, he ended up fine.
For the most part.
Or so he tried to convince himself.
āThe doctor stopped me on my way backā said they discussed your injuries with you. I mean, theyād already told me most of it butā¦ā Dabadie broke off, hands clenching and unclenching nervously before he continued, ā... are you alright?ā
The question caught Sae off guard. Heād expected the man to go off on some tangent about soccerā simply thinking of the sport now made his heart ache, threatening the numb shield of nothing heād built around himselfā and the fact that he hadnāt was frankly disconcerting.
Sae blinked, and drew his gaze away from the linoleum tiles heād subconsciously started to count. Numbers had always grounded him.
Dabadie stared at him as he looked up, eyes wide and filled with concern. Real concern. Not the sickening pity the doctorās gaze had held, nor the sad look in the nurseās eyes as she tended to him. Just concernā honest and so, so terrible for it.
āYes. The surgeons did well.ā Sae answered, short and clipped. It felt like something was blocking his throat, and he couldnāt say more.
Dabadie startled at the answer, hands coming up defensively and head shaking as if to say āYouāve got it all wrongā. And apparently Sae had, because what he said next was: āNo, Sae-chan, I donāt mean your leg. I meanā How do you feel? I know how important soccer is to you, Sae-chan.ā
He said the words so innocently, blinking down at Sae through his glasses like it didnāt mean anything. Like it didnāt take a weight off of his shoulders. Like it didnāt knock the breath from his lungs. Like Dabadie, his manager, the one who supported him for soccer wasnāt asking him about his leg or his ruined career. Like his feelings were more valuable than that.
Sae did his best to breathe, āIt doesnāt matter.ā The lie left his mouth so quickly he was almost able to believe it himself. In a sense, it was true. Nothing he felt would change the fact that he couldnāt play soccer. It was childish to think so. But to himā it did matter that his leg was fucked up. It did matter that he couldnāt play anymore. āMy career is over, Dabadie.ā
His managerās expression morphed from a mixture of relief and panic into shock, āDonāt say that. Thereās still rehab, and the doctor saidāā
āDabadie.ā Saeās voice was sharp enough to cut steel, trembling at the edges with an emotion even he couldn't identify. āItās over.ā
And he couldn't even be embarrassed at how childish he sounded. How small his voice seemed in the hospital room.
Because it was true. It really was over for him.
Sae felt his thoughts start to race, that horrid question burning itself into his mind on repeat: Without soccer, could he even call himself Sae Itoshi?
āSae-chan.ā Dabadieās voice was uncharacteristically stern. āI know this injury has ended your professional career as Re Alās midfielder, but that doesnāt mean your entire career is over. You will recover. I truly believe that. And when you do, you can still play soccer.ā Dabadie paused for a breath, āIt might be low-level, it might be in the paralympics. But it wonāt be over. Itās not over. You can still play soccer.ā
The words stopped Saeās thoughts in their tracks, each gear that had been turning in his head screeching to a stop. He knew that Dabadie was right. It was, after all, a fact that he could still be involved in soccer. Even if he retired from his professional career, he might be able to play at a lower level. Even if that didnāt work out, he could still play for fun.
But that wasnāt the problem.
Sae swallowed, opened his mouth. Tried to come up with something that wasnāt a whiny statement like āBut itās not professional soccerā or āYou want me to play low-level soccer? Donāt joke with meā. A simple, decisive, āShut up.ā was what left his mouth instead.
Because what else was he supposed to say?
That suddenly, the idea of playing soccer at any level that wasnāt professionalā that wasnāt world classā made him sick to his stomach? Made him want to shake his head and say āFuck thatā?
And it wasnāt because he didnāt love soccer. Saeās whole life was soccer. If he didnāt love it, what the hell was he even doing with his life? Such a notion was ridiculous. It was, afterall, an undeniable fact that Sae Itoshi loved soccer.
It was simply because everything that was worth it in soccer couldnāt be found in the lower leagues. It was the reason why heād refused to join any Japanese teams. Why heād refused to represent his country. With no true sense for soccer, those second-rate teams were playing a different game. And it wasnāt soccer.
That was a fact, also.
So Sae tried not to feel guilty when Dabadieās face fell at his reaction.
āSae-chanā¦ā The man tried, but his voice fell off into an awkward silence that neither of them tried to fill with words. In the background, the hospital sang with its distinct soundsā the beeping of machines, the clacking of shoes against linoleum, the quiet murmurs of voices, and the tapping of pens against clipboards.
Dabadie cleared his throat. Tried again.
āSae-chan, I mean it. Retirement is a drastic option that we simply need to consider. The doctor has outlined a recovery plan for you, and itās quite promising. So long as you stick to itāā
āDabadie.ā Sae cut him off, hating the way his voice sounded worn and thin, like it was fraying at the edgesā more so because he sounded exactly like he felt rather than anything else.
It was nice, having someone care for him so deeply. Dabadieās presence was warming. When heād first gone to Spainā impressionable, naive, and so, so painfully aloneā his manager had been there. Heād shown him the city, taught him useful phrases, and smiled at him even when he snapped and snarled back.
Sae had always thought that he didnāt deserve Dabadie. The man was too kind to be dealing with him. To be dealing with a cold-hearted asshole.
And now, with his life turned upside down, it felt like he didnāt deserve anything at all.
A voice in his mind whispered that Dabadie should just leave. He was wasting his time on him. Wasting his time on the irredeemable. Wasting his time on something that was broken beyond repair.
Sae felt his heart squeeze in his chestā a tangible weight pushing the breath out of his lungs.
His leg was fucking shattered. His soccer career was over. His life was, officially, ruined.
What did he have left? Hopes and dreams? Those would get him nowhere. Hopes were irrational wishes that would never come true, and dreams were impossible things only the naive could believe in. Sae was neither irrational nor naive. He hadnāt been for a long time.
So he knew what his future held: Nothing.
And for a brief, fleeting moment, it crossed his mind that maybe a deplorable person like himā whose only use in life was soccerā would be better off dead. That the crash should have killed him. That his skull should have shattered instead of his leg.
The destruction of his dominant leg wasnāt too far off from death, after all.
Then Sae felt himself shudder, full-body, at the prospect. He almost laughed. How revolting was it, that he was wishing for death, when heād been lucky enough to get away with his life and the driver hadnāt. Because he wasnāt stupid. The doctor had said that the brunt of the crash had been on the front of the car.
He truly was a monster.
If he were Rin, he would've hated himself too.
ā¦
The violent boom of the door slamming behind Rin echoed in Saeās ears. The room fell as silent as death. Even Shidou stilled completely, eyes trained on the door with a torn expression.
Sae refused to give in to the urge to do so as well. What would he do, anyway? Run after Rin? He couldnāt even stand, let alone talk to his brother correctly (or so Rin thought, with the way heād stormed out of the room like he had a personal vendetta against Sae).
He didnāt understand. Heād just stated the truth. Told Rin that the surgeon did their best, but heād never play soccer again. That he may struggle to walk, even. Perhaps it had been harsh, but his brother wasnāt a baby anymore. He could handle hard truths. Or, Sae thought he could handle them.
He blinked at the tiled ceiling, and absently began to count each tile again. When Rin had been talking to him, his words sparking tension in the air, heād begun to count them.
Calculations had always run through Saeās head smoothly, like water might flow down a stream. He wasnāt good in school. But math wasnāt the only thing that fell under calculations, under numbers. Soccer was full of numbers. And numbers were constant. Predictable. Calming.
The counting slowed his heartbeat, kept his lungs working at an appropriate pace, and stopped rash thoughts from exiting his mouth as words.
Stopped rash thoughts like, Why are you here Rin? To tell me how pathetic I am? To measure me by my now-nonexistent skill in soccer, like I have measured you? To declare me worthless? Because none of it would be wrong. All thoughts that left Sae with a nagging, unsure feeling in his stomach. Like the anticipation of waiting for a blow that would never come.
Yet, the counting still wasnāt enough to distract him from the strange feeling in his chest that heād just lost something irreplaceable.
He had a feeling that it wasnāt his leg.
Saeās eyes drifted past Shidouā now stepping towards his bedsideā and Dabadie, to gaze at the door. Heād been trying not to look, but he couldnāt help himself. His eyes found the small window, and he squinted against the harsh light to try and see Rin.
But it quickly became apparent that he couldnāt see Rin. Not from the low angle he was laying at.
Sae fought back the urge to lean forward, straining at his wounds, to try and see him. It probably wouldnāt work. So he turned his eyes to the tiles again. He already knew they numbered 16. He counted them anyway.
āSae.ā Shidouās voice was sharp. It broke the silence that had formed when Rin left with the same subtlety that a hammer might use to break a window. That is: no subtlety at all.
Sae didnāt look down from the ceiling. His hands trembled, and he clenched them in his blankets to make them still. He didnāt want to look down and see the disappointment in the demonās eyes. He could already feel them burning into his face.
Shidouās voice rang out another time, sounding very close, āSae, stop looking at the damn ceiling and listen.ā His words were loud and grating. Harsh as Sae had ever heard him, harsh enough that it was impossible to pretend to ignore him.
He turned his head to the striker, feeling his muscles tighten, āIām not in the mood.ā
āFuck you.ā Shidouās voice trembled, but not in weakness. No. His face had morphed into something terribleā eyes narrowed, pupils dilated, nose wrinkled, lip curled. Something that was more animal than man. āRin was really worried, you know?ā
He paused, and Sae opened his mouth to speakā maybe to tell him to get out, he didnāt knowā but his heart was suddenly in his throat, pounding. He trembled helplessly under Shidouās gaze as the striker continued.
āRin was worried. And youā you just sit there and act like that? Heās your brother, for fuckās sake. Not some guy who showed up for an autograph!ā Here Shidou stared at him incredulously, throwing his hands up as if to say āItās just ridiculous!ā before he kept ranting, āWhen he saw the news⦠he freaked, Sae. And he came as soon as he could to see you.ā
Sae didnāt respond, even as Shidou took a deep breath, trembling. He couldnāt respond, for fear that something honest might leave his mouthā like I donāt want Rin to see me like this instead of Why would I want trash to visit me?
āI justāā Shidou broke off awkwardly, bubblegum eyes turning to glare at the ceiling as if the mere sight of Saeās face was too much for him to bear. āHow could you say that to him? Tell him you canāt play soccer anymore, like your dreams never meant anything.ā
āThey didnāt.ā Sae wavered, minutely, as he said it. Because he knew, logically, playing soccer had once been a dream. A hope. And for the longest time, that had meant becoming the worldās number one striker. That had been his dream. His hope. Rinās dream. Rinās hope. Something that belonged to both of them.
But it defied logic. So Sae had crushed it to pieces, watching it fall apart in his hands as he did so. Had watched Rinās face fall into sickening, pale-faced despair. Logically, it hadnāt ever mattered to him. Not truly. And yetā
āDonāt be a dick, Sae. Even if your dreams never mattered to you, theyāve always mattered to Rin. You would have to be blind to not see that. He spent all of Blue Lock chasing you.ā Shidou inhaled, deep, once more. His gaze shifted back to Sae.
He was surprised to see more than just anger in the strikerās gaze. Maybe it was pity that accompanied Shidouās rage. It was easier to think that way, to scorn him for his words, then.
But Sae knew Shidou. The man was straightforward, eccentric, and most importantly always said what he meant. And his actions followed that. It left a foul feeling in his stomach, thinking that Shidou still managed to have sympathy for him.
Suddenly, shockingly, Shidouās hand came up to rest on his shoulder, like it had for Rin, earlier.
āSae,ā He said. Not Sae-chan. Not Lashes. Not Genius. Just Sae. There was a seriousness that settled over his features, something that washed away his rash anger and even the small amount of sympathy in his eyes. āRin loves you. Stop acting like such an asshole and talk to him like youāre brothers. He doesnāt give two shits if you can play soccerā thatās not what heās upset about.ā
Sae felt frozen in time.
Shidouās touch was too-warm on his skin, burning with an intensity he didnāt know how to address. Because there was nothing logical about the way the tan hand on his shoulder made his pulse jump, or the way those sincere, bubblegum eyes made him tremble and fall just a few inches closer to tears.
The strikerās voice echoed in his thoughts.
āHe doesnāt give two shits if you can play soccerā
Andā
That had to be wrong.
Sae couldnāt remember a time when he hadnāt heard his name from his brotherās lips not accompanied by a promise that the younger would kill him in a soccer match.
They were the Itoshi brothers, soccer prodigies that had risen to the top leagues of the world.
Sae was never not followed by Itoshi, Japanās Genius Midfielder.
And Rin was never not followed by Itoshi, Blue Lockās Destroyer Prodigy.
Itoshi was never not followed by soccer.
So it had to be wrong, when Shidou said so casually that Rin didnāt care if he couldnāt play. The notion was foolish, hopeful.
Yetā
Saeās thoughts spiraled into something resembling a tornado. There was nothing that he could defineā everything was such a jumbled messā and that made him feel lost. Like he was a stranger trying to interpret the fleeting emotions flashing across anotherās face. Except it was his body, his thoughts, his emotions, and it didnāt make sense to misunderstand himself.
Unconcerned, Shidou leaned closer, raising goosebumps along Saeās neck, āItās patheticā¦ā He began, and the ghost of his breath had Sae tensing, waiting for something, ā...how you sit here and pretend like this mess isnāt something you created.ā
Something built up in Saeās throat, thick, vile, and bitter. āGet off of me.ā
Shidou stilled, the pressure of his hand on Saeās shoulder lifting, like he was handling something delicate. Like Sae was something about to crack. It hovered in that stateā almost leaving, recklessly remainingā as if unsure of how to proceed but unwilling to back down.
Sae felt his shoulders heave with his next breath, body shaking with emotions he couldn't quite define, āDonāt make me ask twice.ā He blinked, staring at Shidou in disbelief as the man refused to back off, ignoring his blatant order.
Was he deaf?
The striker didnāt glance away, eyes wide and staring intensely at him. His hand remained on Saeās shoulder, and he didnāt back up.
āYou and Rināā Shidou broke off with a sound that was halfway between a chuckle and a sharp, bitter laugh, āYouāre more similar than you realize.ā His face became more serious. āStop avoiding the conversation, Sae. I know what youāre doing.ā
āShidouāā Sae hissed as he tried to shrug off the strikerās handā wanting to be rid of the oppressive closenessā but was unable to muster the strength to do so. His attempts only jostled Shidouās hand, and added to the boiling pressure of the dark, pulsing anger filling his veins.
Shidouās voice was mocking as he, without a moment of hesitation, cut Sae off, āSae.ā His hand tightened on the midfielderās shoulder, and he stared intensely into his tourmaline eyes. āI know I donāt understand how it feelsā how you feel after being told you probably wonāt be playing soccer professionally anymore. But I do know that this isnāt an excuse to fight. In fact, itās an excuse to stop fighting. You need to get your shit together and talk to Rin.ā
Shidouās voice faded off into silence, and for a moment, the hospital room was as still as it had been when Rin had first left.
The strikerās words echoed in Saeās mind, split into tiny fractures of thoughts.
āā¦I donāt understandā¦ā
And Shidou didnāt. Sae felt that knowledge bubble up like tar in his throat and just barely kept a childish āYouāre right. You donāt understandā from leaving his lips.
Because Shidou didnāt understand, didnāt know, what it was like to have soccer taken from him.
And Sae felt it like a yawning pit in his chestā a gap within him that heād never be able to place. Felt it in the quiet whisper of his thoughts that asked, hesitantly, gently: Without soccer, does life even matter? Am I Sae Itoshi, anymore?
āā¦not an excuse to fightā¦ā
Were they fighting? Sae supposed Rin might think they were. They had fought, physically, verbally, just the other day.
But Sae had never thought of it that wayā never considered his interactions with Rin to be fights. Afterall, fighting served no purpose, and Saeās endeavors with his brother always served a purpose.
There was no fight. There was no excuse.
It made him want to dig his nails into Shidouās skin and shake him, shouting all the while, āIām doing this for Rinā for his dream, for his future! Do you really think I want him to hate me?ā
Because Sae had never been fighting with Rin.
He was just trying to save Rin from the reality heād had no one to save himself from.
āā¦get your shit togetherā¦ā
Sae had his shit together.
Shidou didnāt know what the hell he was talking about.
He had sat there, unmoving, as Rin had trembled and shook like it was his leg that had been shattered. Like it was his career that had been ruined. Like it was him who had seen the driver. Like it was him who was damaged beyond repair.
Sae hadnāt said āLeave.ā when Rin had walked in. Hadnāt shouted āI didnāt ask you to come here.ā when acid had bubbled up his throat and itād taken everything in him to stop his hands from shaking.
Because how was it that he didnāt have his baby brotherās number, and Rin had thought heād had it all along?
Maybe it was better that way.
It was too late to apologize, anyway.
āā¦talk to Rinā¦ā
He stifled a laughā or maybe it was a sobā that built up in his throat at the suggestion.
Talking wouldnāt fix either of them.
āWeāre not fighting. Mind your own business and get lost.ā Sae managed, hoping Shidou would receive it well and just leave.
Needless to say, it wasnāt received well. Shidou never reacted predictably, and the demand had him recoiling. His face twisted, and he drew his hand away from Saeās shoulder. Like he was disgusted. And he should beā Sae was abhorrent. But he couldn't help his nature, and there was something hurtful in it anyway.
āIāve just told you that Rinās worried for you, even after all youāve done to him, and you still have the audacity to act like an asshole?ā Shidou practically snarled at him, āYou need to grow up.ā
Sae clenched his fists, felt his body tremble. Felt the anger sizzling in his veins, threatening to burst at the seams. Felt it like a parasite, digging into his skin and burrowing deep until he couldnāt see anything but red.
Shidou kept talking, each word filled with agitating venom, āOr are you just going to keep acting like soccer is more important to you than your brother?ā
He felt the parasitic anger writhe, stretching his skin until it snapped.
āGet out.ā Saeās voice left his body and it didnāt sound like his own. It was too loud, too sharp, too unstable. Trembling with each emotion that rose and fell with the breath in his lungs. Each emotion that pounded in his chest along with his heart. Trembling with all his rage, despair, and agony.
Shidou backed up an awkward half-step. Not-quite-leaving but not-quite-staying. Caught in between fight and flight, he stood with his bubblegum eyes blown wide, body stock-still like a deer caught in headlights.
Sae felt something build in his throat, āGet. Out.ā
āSae-chan,ā Shidou admonished, tried to take back the half-step of his retreat, but it didnāt mean anything, anymore. Heād already taken that half-step away. Sae had already watched him take it.
āJUST GET OUT!!ā Sae shouted, against the pressure in his lungs, against the lump building in his throat, against the burning in his eyes. Against time itself, which always slipped like water through his fingers when all he wanted it to do was stop. For it to rewind.
Because heād give anything to see Rinās wonder-filled eyes staring up at him again as the boy finally asked: āNii-chan? Play?ā While holding Saeās soccer ball up to him like it was a mundane request and not everything Sae had ever dreamed of.
Because heād give anything to feel the solid touch of a soccer ball against his cleats as he sent it soaring to his baby brotherās feet in a faulty yet near-perfect arc for the last time.
Because heād give anything to look down at Rinās pale, tear-streaked face on that unforgiving snowy night and take everything back.
But time would never stop for Sae and the universe kept spinning mercilessly.
Such thoughts would always remain as hopes and dreamsā weak things that revealed his flawed perfection.
And as Shidou walked out of the room with naught but a small glance, Sae supposed that the world was better for it.
Heād just fuck up any second chance the universe gave him, anyway.
Notes:
I am absolutely obsessed with Rin and Sae reconciling and having a happily ever after (or as close to it as they can get)!!!
Obviously the drama and angst before they reach this is my favorite, too, but ehejkwkrkrjje im just so excited for what i have planned š
Zombie apocalypse ryusae slowburn as sae tries to find/rescue rin would lowkey hit might write that sometime. (I'm actually addicted to zombie apocalypse scenarios, I think about it often. Am I crazy? probably.)
SCHOOL STUPID, SOCCER SMART SAE ON TOPPPP!!! š£ļøš„š„š„
Also⦠i lowkey planned WAYY too much for this chapter so a lot of stuff had to shift to the fourth one. Itās okay, though. It works out better this way.
HEADS UP!! I'm about to have a bunch of exams in the next 2 weeks so the fourth chapter may take a long time. I'll be doing my best, though!
Chapter 4
Summary:
Rin was struck, suddenly, by the thought that Sae didnāt look like himself. A few weeks in the hospital had slimmed the midfielder down, made him look almost delicate.
Once (Once, as if it had been years ago, as if it hadnāt been mere weeks since Saeās top form.) his brother had been one of the top athletes in the world. Each movement of his body was full of power, his muscles rippling and guiding each limb in a perfect harmony of motion. Now, his body was weakness, and what muscle remained lifted his limbs in shaky, unbalanced movements
It made Rin sick to his stomach. It made it hard to look at Saeā or, rather, at the pale imitation of his brother before him.
Notes:
this took me way too long due to my exams and all these final projects i have⦠actually making me freak out
im sorry š
hopefully the contents of this chapter were worth the wait
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
The last precious minute of a soccer match could decide everything.
A minute would be too little, one might say. But time slowed down in those last 60 seconds, as if God himself had put a hand to the worldās clock to stop its rhythmic ticking. As if the world itself was holding its breath, wanting for more.
And that god-given minute quickly turned into a lot of time on the pitch. A minute was, after all, a lot of time on the battlefield. A goal can be made in a minute, a shot can be fired in a minute. A game can be won, a game can be lostā and so, too, might a life be saved, or a life be lost.
And for Rin, time slowed in a similar manner over the next few weeks he sat stationed at Saeās bedside.
Because that is what he feltā stationed, like some goddamned soldierā as he was forced to sit stoically at his brotherās bedside. Like all that theyād said to each other amounted to nothing. Like he wouldnāt take the first opportunity to shirk the responsibility and force Saeās care into someone else's hands.
(Rin had pondered this enough to consider that perhaps Shidou would be a willing candidate. Then he had shivered with an intense and sudden wave of guilt, and foregone the thought completely. He would just have to wait until his parents responded, beyond the brief āWe heard about Sae. Sending well-wishes! Will visit when possible.ā he had received. He tried not to think about the very real possibility that they simply wouldnāt take over the responsibility.)
As it was, Rin was just about ready to leave. It would be so easy to leave.
His eyes caught on the taunting handle of the door, the shine of it in the sharp, fluorescent hospital lights. It almost seemed to call his name, with the way it shone.
The door clicked, and Rin snapped back to reality as a man walked in, all dressed in white. He recognized the man immediatelyā it was hard not to, as he had been the doctor caring for Sae for the past few weeks.
That restless feeling rose in his throat againā the desire to leave pounding at his templesā as the man strode to Saeās beside.
Please, Rin wanted to say, but didnāt dare, Say I can go.
(And wasnāt it terrible that his first thought wasnāt to beg for Saeās recovery? To plead for Sae to be well again?)
Sae was still as the doctor approached, staring at the man indifferently from his throneā for anywhere that the midfielder sat seemed to become regalā atop the rickety hospital bed.
āGood news!ā The man exclaimed, cheerfully. Rin had learned that this was the norm for him, yet was still astonishedā and, quite frankly, jealousā at his ability to remain so joyful as Sae stared him down. āYou're able to be discharged today.ā
Sae made no motion to respond. He simply cocked his head to the side, faintly, as if to ask, āAnd?ā
āOf course, youāll have to keep that leg elevated to reduce pain and swelling.ā The doctor tapped a finger against his clipboard, seeming to consult it for a moment before turning his gaze back to Sae, āYouāll be taking a variety of medicine to manage the pain and youāll need to be punctual in taking it. I would recommend that you take it easy, as well. Being discharged does not mean youāre out of the danger zone yet. Complications could still occur.ā
āMmm.ā The midfielder hummed, noncommittal. Rin glared in his direction, noting the glazed-over look in his eyes. It was clear that he wasnāt paying attention.
The very thought that Sae wasnāt listening, wasnāt even trying to care, summoned something dark and unforgiving from deep within Rinās chest. When he swallowed convulsively against the asshole and do you even care? that nearly exploded out of his mouth, the taste of the emotion was thick, vile, in the back of his throat.
It made him want to scream
It made him want to walk out of the room, so that Sae could call him back with a panicked, āWait, Iām sorry, I need you here!ā. So that he could feel appreciated. Wanted. Needed. So that Sae could see all the ways that he was wrong. (But that would never happen, because Sae didnāt make mistakes, and Sae never said sorry.)
But Rin stayed, because there was no one else to listen to the doctor for his brother, and damn him if he didnāt want Saeās recovery more than anything in the world.
ā¦
The next few hours saw them standing in the lobby. It wasnāt very busy, but the hospital was always filled with noise, with movement. Very busy meant packed, not very busy simply meant crowded. If heād been anywhere else, Rin would've wanted to peel his skin off at the disgusting closeness brought on by the crowd of people milling about like npcs, talking like it was their job. But with the childish argument occurring in front of him between Sae and a nurse, the sound became bearable. Appreciated, even.
Rin shifted, and his shoe squeaked on the linoleum floor, loud enough that it sent a tiny wince through his body. He had half a mind to take the offending shoe off and hurl it at Sae. Sae, genius midfielder, who was locked in a pointless argument with a nurse like the asshole he was.
He sucked in a bracing breath and did his best not to scream as the nurseās pleading reached a fever-pitch. The lady at the front desk looked at him in what might've been solidarity, but was much too close to pity to make him feel anything but embarrassed.
āMr. Itoshi,ā The nurseās tone was stern but fraying at the edges with annoyance and exhaustion, āPlease sit down.ā
Her pleas fell upon deaf ears. Sae remained half-propped against the front desk as if the effort of doing so wasnāt making him shake. His face was pale and scrunched up in pain, but he still shook his head. He didnāt need to speak to make it obvious that his answer to her request was ānoā.
The nurseās hand hovered closeby, āMr. Itoshiāā She was hesitant to touch him, and Rin really couldn't blame herā his brother had been acting like an asshole all morning, and had snapped at her many times before for lesser offenses (such as offering a helping hand when he almost plummeted to the floor because he was refusing to do anything but walk).
Rin sighed. It was a sharp, frustrated sound.
Sae refusing to exit the hospital in a wheelchair was the last thing heād been worried about. Now, it was at the forefront of his problems.
The whole situation was a hell in and of itself, somehow managing to reflect his mental state almost perfectly. As if the universe had carefully crafted the moment to allow his mind and body to match. To allow each of his senses to be assaulted at once by exhaustion, rage, and confusion.
Did Sae even care?
The thought flickered through his brain, and only added to his rising irritation.
After surgery just over a week ago, Sae was attempting to force himself to walk around. It was frankly bizarre and something heād never thought his logical brother would do. Afterall, he was aggravating his injury. Didnāt he want to recover?
Rin supposed the answer might be ānoā as his brother snapped at the nurse for what seemed to be the millionth time.
āStop it.ā Sae looked like he would've said more if it wasnāt taking so much of his energy to keep himself upright. Venom laced his tone. Rin wasnāt sure if his brother was talking to his shaking limbs or the nurseā it was hard to tell, what with his eyes being fixed somewhere between reality and an imperceptible plane of existence.
The nurse looked affronted at the demand, and her gaze sought out Rin as if to plead with him. āDo something.ā Her eyes seemed to say, rimmed by dark circles that spoke of many hours of work and not nearly enough compensation, āHeās your family.ā
And it might've been sympathy that moved Rin to intervene. It mightāve also been his oncoming headache, or the fact that he was sick and tired of Sae causing a scene. Maybe it was simply because no one else would do it. Not many people were experienced, like he was, at withstanding Saeās presence. That isā withstanding the highest concentration of bluntness and arrogance that walked the planet.
āDonāt be lukewarm. Sit down or Iām leaving you.ā Rin said, casually, taking a page out of Saeās book and doing his best to seem unaffected. As if he didn't care that Sae was relying on him, or that he was causing a scene.
(As if it wasnāt something that had him internally screaming, because what the fuck do you mean he had to deal with this asshole for over a month? It had Rin thinking that bones shouldnāt take nearly that long to heal. It was fucked. Clearly, the universe hated him.)
Surprisingly enough, Sae sat down. His face was carefully blank, even as his limbs shook and something stormy loomed in his eyes.
Rin had long been unable to read his brother, and couldnāt make heads or tails of what the hell he was thinking.
In the now-quiet lobby, the nurseās grateful sigh was loud. The sound broke an unspoken barrier of tension and the hospital seemed to release a great breath all at once, murmurs and beeps resuming like nothing had been wrong at all. Like super star Sae Itoshi hadnāt just been causing a scene in the hospital's lobby like he was 7 years old.
Rin took a deep breath in an attempt to brace himself, only to stop halfway with a frown. The hospital air made him feel sick. He couldnāt stand the smell of linoleum and harsh antiseptic.
The nurse cleared her throat politely, āMr. Itoshi is all clear to leave. Would you like me to assist you?ā Her hands rested on the handles of the wheelchair. Saeās gaze was fixed on the ground. He looked a bit lost. Maybe scorned. Like a dog that had been yelled at by its owner for something that wasnāt its fault. Which, for the record, didn't make sense because everything Sae was doing was his fault. Nobody was telling him to act like an asshole, afterall.
āNo.ā Rin said, curtly. Then: āThanks.ā He tacked the last word on as an afterthoughtā when a mocking voice in his head whispered, āyouāre sounding a lot like Sae, right nowā.
āAlright. Have a good day, you two!ā The nurse stepped back and flashed a quick smile. It made him jealous to think that she was able to smile so easily at Sae, even after heād been so rude to her. He couldn't find it in himself to do that, even after all these years.
He nodded a response, watching for any change in Saeās expression as he stepped behind him to wheel him out the front doors.
Sae didnāt say anything.
The nurse's shoes clacked against the linoleum floors, growing softer by the second.
Rin turned his head away from Sae with a click of his tongue and began to push him out the doors.
ā¦
The week before, Rin had been caught in an endless loop of tears. In hindsight, he felt stupid for crying. Heād simply wasted tears on something lukewarm. It had been foolish to think his mother would answer him. Heād known that. Heād called anyway. Reality had slapped him in the faceā brutal, cold, unforgiving.
He shouldāve known the universe would curse him like it hadā curse him to be the one available when his brother was hurt, and not his parents. Curse him to provide care to the one whoād done everything but care for him. It made him want to scream until his throat bled, scream at deaf earsā because who would ever listen to the younger, the lesser?ā that he didnāt deserve this. That it wasnāt his responsibility.
But Rin had no choice.
The world didnāt care whose fault it was. Who it was fair to give responsibility to.
And Rin had just drawn the short end of the stick. It was something he couldnāt run from, no matter how badly he wanted to.
Because who else was available to take care of Sae? Not their parents (the thought left a bitter taste in the back of his throat). He tried not to think of the reason why his throat felt raw, his body ached, and his head pounded. Tried not to think of the empty hospital corridor and his calls that werenāt answered. Tried not to think of the rush of embarrassment that had consumed him when Shidou had found himā slumped against the wall outside Saeās room, eyes puffy and face wet with tearsā and asked āWant me to break his other leg?ā
Rin felt, suddenly, that Shidou was too good for him. Their friendship had started off rough, yes, but it was a friendship nonetheless. He even thought such a start had made it strongerā it was easier to get along with someone when they knew you at your worst, at your most vulnerable. And Shidou had seen it allā had seen him rage and snap like a muzzled dog, had seen him shatter and sob until he couldnāt breathe. Yet, Shidou still offered a hand and set him right back on his feet.
Heād done it that fateful night, when Rin had been drunk and crying, face throbbing from Saeās merciless punches. Because who else would have set his nose? Who else would have guided him home? Who else would have done anything but turn away and call him lukewarm?
Shidou had done it a week agoā in a flash, like the act was as easy as breathingā when heād told Rin to pack his stuff, that he was taking him to see his brother.
And heād done it again, a few days ago, when heād woken up early and told Rin, āYou worry about Sae, Iāll get your stuff,ā before proceeding to drive all the way back to the hotel (unprompted) and take Rinās essentials to Saeās apartment. Heād even come back to drop off the car (a rental that theyād been sharing) then taken a taxi back to the hotel.
Rin was thankful beyond words, almost to the point of shame. Shidou shouldnāt have done all of those thingsā Rin could've done them by himself.
When heād said as much, Shidou had scoffed dramatically and asked āYou sure Sae-chan didnāt give you a concussion?ā before sobering up and saying āIt was nothing, so donāt worry ābout it too muchā. Heād ruffled Rinās hair, then, before leaving. The feeling had taken him back to when he was younger, when Saeās touch had still been delicate and the world had been perfect.
Rin really didnāt deserve such a good friend. But there was nothing he could do to shake Shidouās grubby hands off of him (where they remained attached like the sticky fingers of a toddler declaring that a toy was theirs and no, they werenāt sharing).
Now, as he pulled the car up to the front of Saeās apartment, that fact became especially clear. God knows he wouldn't have been able to handle Sae on top of himself. Shidou had seen right through the lie that he could.
(If he hadn't, Rin wasnāt even sure where heād have been, right now. Perhaps still falling apart in the hallway. Perhaps simply abandoning Sae like an asshoke.)
Rin had thought that maybe the drive to Saeās would serve to lighten the atmosphereā or at least allow him to pretend to feel a sense of normalcyā but it had done quite the opposite. It had only made him feel less and less attached to reality. He could practically hear the tick tick of the muscle in his jaw at the very thought of it.
The car ride had been awkwardly quiet, save for a few remarks that slipped past Saeās lipsā such as ācarefulā or āturn hereā ā that had Rinās hands clenching against the steering wheel. The last thing he needed to hear was his absent older brother backseat driving.
That hadnāt even been the worst of it. Saeās face had twisted oddly with every motion, as if to ask āshould you really be driving?ā. Maybe it made senseā what with the recent car crashā but did Sae really think so little of him that he thought he didnāt know how to drive? He wasnāt a teenager anymore, afterall, and being likened to one (with an expression that questioned his driving skill, labeling him reckless) wasnāt warranted.
Rin almost scoffed at the thoughtā him? a reckless driver? No. That was all Shidou. He tried not to shudder as he remembered all the instances heād mistakenly let the bug sit behind the wheel.
It was honestly a miracle that heād driven so safely last weekā it had scared Rin more than anything else, at the time, but maybe the change was a good thing. One of the only good things that had happened that day, actually.
āAre we going to sit here all day?ā Saeās apathetic drawl shocked him back to reality. It immediately put a scowl on his face, straining the already aching muscles.
Sae, contrary to logic, had only gotten more annoying after a week of treatment in the hospital. Rin was starting to think the only benefit of him being out of the hospital was the fact that the poor nurses didnāt have to deal with his asshole attitude anymore. Heād been growing tired of watching his older brother snap at the kind ladies like they weren't half the reason he was still alive.
(Although, now Saeās ire was turned towards him, and that was making his life a special kind of hell.)
āRin.ā Sae snapped, as if even a momentās delay to his scheduleā his because there was no real schedule, only Saeās manic need for one that Rin, frankly, didnāt give a shit aboutā would surely break his leg all over again.
In response to Saeās words, Rin stepped on the gas (maybe a little bit harder than normal on purpose, but he was only human) and the car jerked back into motion. He wouldāve been lying if Saeās tiny half-breath of annoyed surprise at the motion wasnāt satisfying.
It wasnāt long before heād found a parking spot and begun the arduous task of getting Sae to his apartment. An apartment that, mind you, was not on a lower floor (because that would be too simple, too kind, for someone like Rin) but instead on the sixteenth floor. Which didnāt really seem like that high up, to the average person, let alone an athlete like Rin or Saeā except for the fact that Sae couldnāt fucking walk properly anymore, let alone scale steps.
So, theyād use the wheelchair, right? Theyād take the elevator, surely? That was logical, afterall.
Wrong, apparently. Because refusing to use the wheelchair and hobbling about on crutches was so much safer and made a perfect amount of sense.
In reality, Rin thought it was much more likely that said decision would land Sae right back in the hospital and that it made exactly zero sense.
Heād tried to tell Sae as much, with a tone of voice as close to yelling as he could get without garnering attention, saying that āSae, are you fucking joking? Sit back down. The doctor said you should avoid walking for your first two weeks back.ā
Rin should've expected to be hit with Saeās flat, shark-like stare and an exclamation of, āDo I joke?ā that had him both close to tears and laughter because what the fuck was Sae talking like that for?
But it was more than sobering to hear, anyways. It made him wonderā Did he even know Sae? Was the brother from his childhood truly gone?
Perhaps heād never known Sae at all. That thought was more than Rin could handle, and he quickly shoved it away before it could trigger something. (He wasnāt going to cry those wretched tears again. He wasnāt a baby. He needed to get his shit together and face reality.)
Rin watched as his elder brother huffed a distinctly angry breath at the staircase in front of him. As if they were a particularly bothersome striker that just wouldnāt perform on the pitch properly. As if he was planning to have to do it himselfā put in some effort to score a goal. Or, in the case of the stairs, climb them.
Climb them for sixteen flights. On crutches.
Yeah, like hell Rin was letting that happen.
āSae,ā Rin said, and the name felt wrong on his lips. But nothing would feel worse than saying something so childish, so familiar, as nii-chan, so he let the poisonous feeling settle in his mouth. It was a testament to his will that he didn't grimace as Saeās head snapped towards him.
His brother was pale-faced, sweaty. He still looked worse-for-wear, even without bandages on his face, on his limbs.
Rin was struck, suddenly, by the thought that Sae didnāt look like himself. A few weeks in the hospital had slimmed the midfielder down, made him look almost delicate.
Once (Once, as if it had been years ago, as if it hadnāt been mere weeks since Saeās top form.) his brother had been one of the top athletes in the world. Each movement of his body was full of power, his muscles rippling and guiding each limb in a perfect harmony of motion. Now, his body was weakness, and what muscle remained lifted his limbs in shaky, unbalanced movements
It made Rin sick to his stomach. It made it hard to look at Saeā or, rather, at the pale imitation of his brother before him.
It felt wrong to think itā to think that this new Sae was an imposter.
But to Rin, Sae had always been untouchable. Perfect. And the man trembling beside him, glaring like it meant everything to him that he was being stopped from performing the most illogical act he could possibly dare to try, leaning more heavily on his crutches by the second, was anything but perfect.
Flawed, is what he was now. Imperfect.
Rin swallowed, shook his head a little. This is wrong, he told himself. Heard the words echo through his head like theyād been spoken. Felt them vibrate through his bones.
Yet, it was hard to shake the feeling of annoyance, the feeling of hatred, the feeling of disgust, for the man before him. Hard to shake the urge to bite out, āThis is pathetic. Take your display of pride elsewhere. I didnāt agree to take care of you to watch you drown in something so lukewarm as your own emotions. Youāre an Itoshi. Act like it.ā
āWhat?ā Sae snapped, with such force that he wobbled a little, crutches rattling with the motion. The sound of it snapped Rin back to reality.
His older brother managed to keep himself steady, but not without effort. When heād stabilized himself, he spoke again, āWhat.ā It was less of a question now, more of a demand. Saeās eyes remained trained on his face, unforgiving.
Rin tried to pretend like he hadnāt flinched, made to move forward, and aborted the motion halfway when he realized Sae wasnāt going to fall, āThe elevator is that way.ā He pointed vaguely to the right.
The simple correctionā because that was what Rin was doing, correcting Saeās illogical behaviorā had the midfielderās face twisting into something nasty.
Sae practically spat out his next words, āI know that.ā His face twisted again, as if he was trying to compartmentalize his rage into something manageable, before it settled back into a nasty, open glare.
It was expressiveā more so than Rin may have ever considered possible for his brother just a few weeks ago.
Perhaps it was the stress, perhaps it was the medication, or perhaps it was something entirely different. Rin didnāt care. The expressions served as a window into Saeās soulā and the longer that the window stayed open, the more Rin wanted to slam the damn thing closed.
It was enough dealing with his own shattered perceptions of reality, knowing that heād never beat his brother in soccer, ever. He didnāt need to see just how wrong he was about Saeās cold, arrogant, aloof personality.
Because the Sae in front of him wasnāt any of those things. He was just⦠normal. Just another pathetic, angry npc who thought he was the main character.
āSae.ā Rin repeated, harsher, louder, since apparently a simple correction wasnāt enough. Subtlety had its time and placeā and it wasnāt now. āWe're taking the elevator. Move.ā He enunciated each syllable slowly. Watched Saeās face twist again, almost seizing, in that way it seemed to do so often recently.
(Rin thought it was very much like a real life glitch, or lag, as if Sae was some robot with faulty programming who bugged out when he couldnāt compute something. The idea was almost funny enough to make him laugh, and almost real enough to make him cry. Because Sae really was like a robot who couldnāt quite comprehend the information he was being fed.)
āSae.ā Rin insisted, instead of saying something stupid like āIf you hurt yourself even more, Iāll kill you myselfā that would make it sound like he cared.
Saeās tourmaline eyes flashed, darting from the stairs to the elevator as something akin to disgust settled over his expression. Then he turned his head towards Rin, his lips parting ever-so-slightly, and the striker feared that he might say something as stupid as āIām taking the stairsā.
But then, his brotherās jaw clicked shut. It was with painful awkwardness that he turned around, as unbalanced as a newborn foal.
Rin tried not to look, biting back the sorrow that rose in his throat at the pitiful image. Afterall, Sae had so gracefully pivoted around defenders on the pitch mere weeks ago.
And that thought was almost more than he could bear.
ā¦
Saeās apartment was nothing like Rin had thought it would look like.
When he had finally managed to open the door (Sae had been adamant that it wasnāt so hard, that Rin just had to put pressure on the handle just so and turn the key this way and then that way, but he remained unconvinced. No lock should be so finicky. The first thing he was going to do was get the damned thing fixed) he had expected something grand. Something worth the struggle of opening the faulty lock barring them from Saeās apartment. Something that lived up to the name of Sae Itoshi, Genius Midfielder.
In reality, Saeās apartment was what could only be described as bleak.
Not empty. Empty had implications of something to be filled. Saeās apartment had been lived in long enough that all his personal affects had found their place. Everything was settled neatly on surfaces or tucked away and unseen. And it was clear to Rin that there was nothing more to be put into the apartment.
But it wasnāt simply blank, either. Because a blank apartment was akin to a blank canvasā it encouraged one to fill it with color, to create something more. Saeās apartment was dull, monotone, but the air was filled with an intangible pressure, and nothing about it seemed to beg for color, for decoration.
No. It was bleak because it was lived in but it didnāt feel lived in. Nothing about the furniture, the walls, or the air so much as whispering of home. It reminded him more of a prison cell than an actual apartment. It had him wondering, incredulously, how Sae even managed to live there. He had money. He could move.
(And wasnāt it odd to think that perhaps he didnāt want to move? Rin felt an odd ache in his chest at the thought of his brother choosing to live in such a place. If Shidou hadnāt confirmed earlier that no, Sae was not lying about where he lived, he might've even called Sae a liar to his face and demanded to be shown his real apartment.)
Sae didnāt seem to care that Rin had stopped to stare at the wasteland of his apartment. He hobbled past the striker with a vaguely annoyed lookā eyebrows pulled together, nose scrunched slightly, a frown pulling at the edges of his mouthā without speaking.
He didnāt say āwelcome to my apartment!ā or āmake yourself comfortable!ā
The midfielder simply took himself to the couch and, quite unexpectedly, flopped onto it. The resulting clatter of his crutches as they were carelessly flung to the floor had Rin grinding his teeth together. A cloud of dust hung in the air, the particles swirling up, up, up in a disturbed swarm.
Sae made a muffled sound, something that wavered between a groan and a sob, and to hear such a noise from his brotherās mouth sent flame down the back of Rinās neck.
Embarrassing.
The thought fleeted through his mindā it was embarrassing that Sae was acting like this.
Rin took a deep breath, sniffled, and willed himself not to sneeze. The sound of it was deafening, and he couldnāt quite get his pulse to stop echoing a staccato beat in his ears.
Saeās breath rasped, unsteady, from where he had buried his face in the couch cushions.
Words rested on his lips, āWhat the hell are you doing? Stop acting like thatā, but he was suddenly trembling too violently for his tongue to safely form the words in his mouth.
The apartment felt too small, too bleak, too cold. Too quiet.
He had to say something.
Say something.
Rinās mouth remained glued shut.
Sae shuffled on the couch, jostled his leg with the motion, and let out a groan before he stilled. Notably, his left leg was laid flatā significant because the doctor had strictly ordered him to keep it elevated.
It almost made Rin angry enough to say something, but his lips seemed to be super-glued together, and remained so even as the thought to scorn his brother with a quick, āYour leg is meant to be elevated, or do you want to stay injured?ā passed through his mind. He could almost hear the words out loud.
But he knew how Sae would respond. That isā with no response. He would simply turn his head (or not even give Rin that much attention, remaining stock-still) and drawl, āDid you say something?ā like a fucking brat. Because apparently Sae was the worldās biggest child in the face of his careerās downfall.
If Rin hadnāt been sacrificing so much of his own precious time, he might have felt bad. If he couldn't imagine the echoes of the crowd in his ears, the distinct scent of the pitch in his nose, the flash of too-bright lights in his eyes, and the taste of sweat in his mouth as Isagiās eyes turned towards himā always Isagi, always his rival, always, always, alwaysā he might have felt downright awful.
As it was, he felt the call to the pitch in his chest, a tangible beast that cared for nothing but playing the game. It beat violently, painfully, like a twisted kind of heart, hammering in his chest and making it impossible to ignore the fact that he was missing the rest of the season for Sae. That he was missing PXGās match against Bastard München for Sae. For a brother that he didnāt even care forā who heād denounced any connection to (beyond that of a predator chasing down his prey) years ago.
(His phone burned a hole in his pocket, Isagiās cheerful message, āCongratulations on your tie! Looking forward to crushing you next week!ā hovering in the back of his mind. Heād left him on read, and hadnāt checked his phone for weeks.)
So he didnāt say the words, didnāt move, just stood, caught in a limbo between action and inaction.
Rin felt something bubbling up in his throatā hot and burning like magma. He swallowed it down, feeling watched despite the fact that Saeās gaze was still turned away, focused on the couch cushions like they offered salvation.
And Sae really was just laying there. He was sprawled out, limbs askew like theyād landed awkwardly but he was too lazy to fix them. (Wasnāt that funny? Japanās Genius, lazy?)
The sight was the opposite of comforting. It sent a shiver down Rinās spine, animal unease prickling his skin and leaving a feeling of anxiety behind. Heād never seen Sae sprawl before. Sae Itoshi didnāt sprawl. He was always poised, proper, composed. Like an uncanny rendition of a human carved out of stone.
Suddenly, Rin couldnāt bear to look at Sae. The midfielder (or former midfielder, he supposed. The thought made his stomach churn) seemed so different from before that he was practically a stranger.
He had the unbidden thought that the man in front of him wasnāt Sae Itoshi at all. That perhaps heād taken the wrong person home.
It almost made Rin want to point a finger at Sae and ask āWho are you? What did you do with my brother?ā until he got a satisfactory response.
The notion was childish. Lukewarm. He knew, logically, that the man on the couch was Sae. But the very sight of him made him feel sick, because even with all of that logic, Rin couldn't quite believe that heād taken home his brother and not some sort of imposter.
The burning in his throat returned tenfold, and his eyes were suddenly searching for anything other than what was in front of him. Anything, that is, but Sae.
The doorās open, his brain provided, most helpfully. As if that was the solution. As if closing the door would seal away all of his problems. Yet he found it easy to forget his thoughts as he slammed the door behind him, watching Sae flinch.
He hadnāt meant to slam it so hard, if he was being honest.
It didnāt change the fact that it sent a sick shiver of satisfaction up his spine, to see his brotherās stone-cold mask wavering at the sound. Even if he knew that Sae was being forced to trust him in such a vulnerable state, and it was hardly right to torture him.
But Rin couldn't help himselfā heād always had a cruel, animal streak. Something that had brought him closer to Shidou, Isagi, or Bachira than it could ever bring him to anyone else. They, too, understood what it was to be a predator amongst prey. A monster amongst humans.
They understood that there was a forbidden, black pleasure to be had from crushing your enemiesā on or off the pitch. And to crush Sae, even weakened as he was, in this small manner made that vile feeling bubble up his throat.
And was it wrong that he still did it, knowing it was wrong? Was it wrong that the tiny jerk of the midfielderās body had him thinking āGood, I hope heās fucking scared, I hope heās fucking sorryā, instead of something more kind? Instead of the normal āShit, my bad?ā
But that predatory desire was rising in him, and Rin felt half-mad with the desire to wrap his fingers around Saeās injured leg and dig into the flesh just to see him writhe. Just to watch, and see if heād run like the prey-animal he was showing himself to be. Just to prove that Sae had been pretending to be a predator this whole time, pretending to be the main character, when he was really just prey to be caught, just another npc to be cut down on the battlefield. And he was suddenly not thinking of the morality of it at all, just the possible satisfaction that might follow.
Maybe Rin was the bad brother. Then againā he hadnāt started it. Saeās actions had been the catalyst for their war of words, of actions, of emotions. Rin had simply followed his lead.
It was with shaking hands that he began to tidy up Saeās small apartment, though it was sterile save for dust. There was no clutter to be moved, no things to be rearranged, no true dirt to be cleaned. He scrubbed at each surface like it was filthy, anyways.
When Rin finally got to the task of organizing all of Saeās medications, he didnāt bother to mention it to Sae. Heād meant to say somethingā afterall, it was his brotherās responsibility to deal with his own healthā but opening his mouth to speak with the midfielder seemed to be a monumental task.
Sae had done nothing but argue with Rin since heād first visited. And Rin really didnāt want to argue anymore. He was so tired of arguing. Yet he couldn't seem to stopā and Sae couldnāt seem to, either.
It was as if their personalities had been designed to repel each other, to be mismatched. As if they were fated to argue and argue and argue and argue until one of them decided to leave, or one of them died.
The endless frustration between them left Rinās skin prickling, his muscles tensing even in silence as he waited for the moments of peace to be broken by shouting. Because Sae had taken to something adjacent to shoutingā something Rin had never thought his brother would do. It was a tone of voice pitched louder than speaking, lower than a yell, but full of ire and nonetheless intense. Like a motherās low snarl at her child to stop acting like a fool.
The very sound of it made Rinās blood chill and his body tremble. Made him feel like he was young again, crying as his mother demanded to know why her favorite porcelain was dashed to pieces on the ground.
A fight with Sae wasnāt like a normal argument. It wasnāt even really a fight. Closer to humiliation or scolding.
Because Rin argued with Shidou all the time. Theyād punch and kick at each other until their heads cleared, if it got bad enough. Mostly, theyād just shout over each other until their throats were raw and they were out of breath. It worked well enough. Afterall, there was a basis of understanding, of connection, in those moments. Shidou and Rin would snap and snarl until both of them felt settled, secure with the results of the argument. Until a compromise or something close was made.
With Sae and Rin, things were different. Rin snapped. Sae shut him down, like it was easy. Like it was logic. Like Rin didnāt know anything and was as worthless as a kid.
Because Sae always seemed to know exactly what to say to destroy Rinā and heād say it in that calm, flat way of his like he was stating a fact. In that way that had Rin damn near nodding along at whatever he said, even if it was downright wrong.
Rin was jerked violently out of his thoughts by his phone ringing.
He flinched at the soundā knocking something over with the movementā and immediately fumbled for the offending device.
It seemed, for a moment, that his heart was beating out of his chest.
It was an unwarranted reaction that had him glancing around the room in embarrassment. He was overreacting, that much he knew. But the prospect of a phone call was suddenly more complicated than he could handleā anyone could be waiting at the end of the line. He didnāt want to talk about Saeās crash anymore.
(The very thought of his brother had an anxious pressure settling beneath his sternum and pushing his organs bodily out of the way until he felt like ripping his own skin apart, if only to get rid of the feeling.)
The phone continued its plaintive ringing.
Rinās heart continued to race against time. At some point, he would have to answer, or simply let the ringing fade into silence.
Hopefully, naively, he wished for it to be his parents. Wished that perhaps theyād finally decided to call, that maybe they had been busy up to this point and had finally made room for him. For Sae, and for all the responsibility that came with taking care of the broken remains of his brother.
Unlikely.
Rin shook his head, and the phone shook in his hand in a sick parody of the motion. As if it, too, was scorning him for his foolishness. The phone was still facing downwardsā the bright light of the screen illuminating the floor with its harsh flowā so he couldnāt see who was calling.
He closed his eyes and took a deep breath, but found himself still unable to face the screen.
If he didnāt look, it would be so easy to pretend that his parents had called. That they were thinking of himā thinking of Sae.
No. Rin didnāt care if they called just for Sae. Heād take anything that would get him out of this mess. Anything that would allow him to return to the pitch and pretend like that night, that crash, had never occurred.
The phone rang, insistent, and he began to tremble. His hand flexed around the damned thing, halfway to releasing it and relishing in the crash it would make against the tiled floor, but also halfway to pulling it closer and viewing the screen.
Rin didnāt look at it.
The phone rang, once, twice more, then fell silent. The screenās light painted the ground with an eerie glow. He waited until it flickered off and plunged the room into darkness once more.
His breath rattle in his lungs, in and out. His pulse hammered in his head.
And when had the day slipped so silently through his fingers?
He could've sworn it was just middayā
He rationalized that heād waited too long, anyways. It hadnāt made sense to pick up. Theyād probably just think he was busy. If whoever it was confronted him about it, heād just lie to them. It would be easy.
(Easy, like Sae had so easily lied to him about their dream?)
Rin inhaled sharply, felt the air like shards of glass against his lungs, felt the pressure beneath his sternum expand with the action.
āWho was it?ā Saeās voice was small, colored with sleep.
Rin opened his mouth to say āNo oneā but the words lodged in his throat when the phone lit up in his hand again, resuming its intense ringing.
There was the sound of shifting fabric, a low groan of stifled pain, and his brotherās head was poking over the back of the couch. His hair was mussed, stray pieces sticking to the sides of his face as he squinted against the light.
Rin could only stare at him in a moment of weakness, pleading for something he couldnāt quite name. Perhaps permission to drop the phone and be done with it.
Sae, naturally, did the exact opposite of helping him.
āAre you going to answer?ā He raised an eyebrow in that lazy, unbothered way of his.
And suddenly, Rinās fingers were scrambling to answer before the thought to comply had even reached his brain. Like he was a child again and Sae had just asked him if he was going to stand there all day, or come play soccerā the question had always jump-started him into manic motion, before he could even think, because how could he do anything to risk a frown on his older brotherās face?
He flipped the phone around, squinting against the light, and answered the call before he could even see that callerās ID.
In hindsight, he probably should have read it.
The phone instantly blared with overwhelming sound.
āRIN-CHAN!!!! Let me in!!!!!ā
And then there was an obnoxious sound of banging at the door, as if a hoard of animals were trying to break in.
ā¦
Ā
The next few minutes had Rin sitting in a daze at one of the few chairs at Saeās quaint dining table, facing none other than Meguru Bachira.
The man in question was smiling that broad, toothy smile of his like nothing was amissā like he hadnāt just burst out of nowhere and demanded to be let inside Saeās apartment. Which, now that Rin thought about it, he shouldnāt even know the location of.
Over the years, Rin had learned that sometimes, with Bachira, you just had to stop thinking. Pondering his actions got you nothing except a headache and confusion beyond remedy. And that is exactly what heād done. What he was doing. Not thinking.
(Or at least, thatās what he was trying to do.)
āMmm, youāre less chatty than usual, Rin-chan. Cat got your tongue?ā Bachira chirped, somehow managing to lilt his tone playfully but also convey concern in the tilt of his head. His honey eyes were wide, fixed on Rin. Like he was watching for some slip-up. It sent a shiver down his spine.
Rin tried not to seem too nervous with his response, āSomething like that,ā His eyes flickered to the shadowed figure of his brother, who had yet to stand from the couch. He didnāt let his gaze linger for too long, lest his staring become obvious.
Bachira nodded like heād given a real response, āI see, I see. Donāt worry, Iāll talk enough for the both of us. Or, I guess, the three of us.ā He paused to crane his neck in Saeās direction, waving a little despite the fact that the midfielderās back was turned to them, āHi, Sae-san!ā
Naturally, Sae did not respond. He hadnāt said a word, nor moved, since Bachira had entered the apartment. One might almost forget he was there, if not for the occasional awkward shuffle as he repositioned himself. (Or perhaps considered relocating, only to find that his leg was aching something terribleā which Rin suspected it was, what with the way heād only just begun to elevate it. What an idiot.)
āSo, Rin-chanā¦ā Bachira slipped back into casual conversation easily, fluidly, like it was instinct. Rin imagined such a feat was as familiar to the other striker as a curve shot was to Rin himself. Bachira steepled his hands under his chin, settling his elbows on the table, miming the serious expression of a detective. āGonna share with the class?ā
Andā wow. That really wasnāt what Rin had thought would exit Bachiraās mouth.
The last few turns of phrases that had exited Bachiraās mouth were distinctly separate from his usual vocabulary. Maybe heād learned a few things from his FC Barcha teammates. Or worse, Shidou. The notion was a little unsettling.
It made him falterā long enough that Bachira cocked his head and hummed in that curious manner of his, as if to ask āWhatcha thinkinā about?ā.
He supposed that it was his fault, though, for being caught off guard. With Bachira, the unexpected always became the expected. He should've known better.
That didnāt exactly change that he had no fucking clue what Bachira was asking him for.
Instead of admitting defeat in displaying such honestyā it would be ridiculous to just say āBachira, what the hell are you asking me?āā Rin settled on a simple question.
āWhat do you mean?ā He stared at Bachira with what he hoped was a convincing flat affect. Thankfully, his voice managed to stay pitched in a low calm that made him seem less confused and more blunt. As if he was asking Bachira to get to the point already and not asking what the fuck he meant.
Smiling againā that godforsaken tooth-baring half-mad joyful smile of hisā Bachira leaned forward with that mock-seriousness of his. Somehow it managed to both lighten the blow of the words that followed but also make Rin feel thoroughly lectured. āRemember? We were gonna hang out, then you kinda just disappeared off the map. I figured something had come up⦠I saw the news. I tried to call. You werenāt answering.ā His molten-gold eyes traced the lines of Rinās face, brows furrowing.
After a momentās pause, Bachira continued, āYo-chan said he tried to get a hold of you. And Hiori, too. You havenāt answered anyone.ā He leaned forward, shedding each layer of faux-seriousness for something much more guarded and intense. āWe were worried. I was worried.ā
They settled into some uncomfortable silence, Bachiraās eyes as sharp as daggers, digging under Rinās skin and ripping until the raw flesh underneath was exposed. Talking and talking and talking when all Rin wanted to do was sit and listen and not have to deal with something so delicate as communication.
If it were Sae, I would not have to talk, he thought, in a moment of half-madness (for when was it ever a good idea to think of Sae as an example?). His fingers twitched, that uncomfortable ache in his chest magnifying until all he could think was, I shouldnāt have answered that call, I shouldāve shut the door in his face, pretended I wasnāt hereā
Faintly, over the rapid pitter-patter of his own heart, Rin registered the heavy, limping steps of Sae as he left the room.
āRin-chan,ā Bachiraās voice was both a tether to reality and the sharp knife cutting him away from it. A manic push-and-pull in opposite directions that made his head spin and the world crash around him until he wasnāt sure if he was right or wrong, if the sun rose in the eastā or was he wrong? Was it really the west? Something beyond his comprehension that had him questioning if up was truly up or if it had actually been down the entire time.
He hated it.
He hated things he didnāt understand.
āRin-chan,ā Bachira placated, eyes softening across the table until Rin didnāt feel as dissected or analyzed as he had before, āIām sorry.ā And then: āFor what happened to Sae. To you.ā
Rin tried to speak, but let out an embarrassing choked kind of laugh instead. He blinked, suddenly feeling humiliated, like heād been caught in a lie. Like heād just broken something and tried to hide it, but failed miserably. (Again, he thought of fine porcelain, the paleness of his brotherās face, the feeling of breathlessness that came from crying too hard, and the harsh look in his motherās eyes.)
From the other side of the tableā the distance suddenly seemed cavernous, impossibleā Bachira simply watched, his bright honey-gold eyes still in the half-light. Waiting. Not sharp, but not soft either. Not-quite-predator, not-quite-prey. An expression that could fall in either direction, should it be prompted to.
It reminded Rin of Sae, in some kind of way. But where Saeās expression had been cold as a winter night, sharp as glass, Bachiraās managed to settle into safe neutrality. Something calming because it was clear that his gaze held no anger, nor sorrow.
But it couldā it could be angry, it could be sorrowful.
Saeās gaze could never be anything but cold, dead. Like the eyes of a zombie as it traced the lines of some horror movieās poor protagonist, itching to dig its teeth in. Mindless, uncaring.
Maybe that was why Rin was able to steady himself, to push past that aching in his chestā that animal urge to bite, to snap against painā and respond honestly.
āI donātā Bachira, nothingās happened to me.ā His voice was weak, sounding less like his own than it ever had, but he didnāt care. Sae couldnāt hear him. He wasnāt there to call him names. There was a kind of confidence to be had in his absence.
Bachira raised an eyebrow, leaning back in his chair until it teetered precariously, āDoesnāt seem that way to me. Youāre not in France right now, are you? You missed the big match against Yo-chan.ā He wobbled in his chair, knees knocking against the table and shaking it in a way that sent panic racing up Rinās spine.
āStop that.ā Rin snapped, before he could stop himself. He wasnāt sure if he meant stop talking or stop playing with the chair.
The wild striker steadied himself with his hands, letting the chairās front legs slammed against the ground, grinning sheepishly, āMy bad, Rin-chan.ā
Bachira let the words rest in the air for a moment before he continued, āAnyway, what Iām trying to say is, I think itās pretty bad for you too. Sae-sanās injury, I mean. Youāve gotta watch him, so you canāt play for the rest of the season.ā
Rin rolled his eyes, tried to soften his voiceā because Bachira really meant well, even if he was being annoyingā and spoke, āI know that.ā
āOkay,ā Bachira smiled, clapping his hands together like theyād just cracked a particularly difficult case, āWanna play soccer with me?ā His eyes flashed fever-bright in the half-light of the room.
āWhat.ā Rin said, in lieu of āDo I look like I want to play soccer at fuck-o-clock at night??!ā
Bachira nodded his head emphatically as if to say āYes, I asked you to play soccer, and yes, I mean right nowā. His golden eyes shone with something mischievous and excitedā as if he were watching the finest arch of a teammateās pass fall right at his feet.
The chair creak-ed in protest as Bachira rocked it back again, cocking his head in the curious manner that a bird of prey might eye its next victim, āWhatās it gonna be, Rin-chan?ā
Rin opened his mouth to say āNoā, but his body betrayed him and it came out sounding a lot more like, āYes,ā
(And maybe he didnāt hate that answer too much, not with the way that Bachiraās face lit up, eyes like twin beacons of his mad joy.)
The chairās legs slammed down again, but it didnāt rattle him so much. The world seemed to fade just a bit more into darkness against the sudden brightness of Bachiraās motions.
The other striker was standing, moving before Rin could so much as blinkā or correct his misstep and say āI meant noāā and began to drag him out the door with his hands.
The warmth from Bachiraās hands, from his smile, was infectious.
And for a moment, that ache beneath his sternum became muted, secondary. His frustration with Sae became background noise.
All Rin could think of was the freeing feeling that came with a ball under his foot, the goal ahead.
Even as Bachira tugged them through the door (fumbling with the unfamiliar lock), a ball somehow procured and now in his hands, neither of them dressed properly, Rin could not bring himself to care.
Rin hadnāt touched a ball in weeks, and they were going to play soccer.
And when they finally reached the unassuming field in some run-down park, Rin felt like heād taken the first fresh breath of air that heād had in weeks. Like he was an addict whoād been denied his addiction until he was shaking for it, dying for it, and heād finally been appeased.
Because that was how soccer was for Rinā he didnāt love it. He didnāt simply live for it. He breathed it. He needed it on some visceral level, like a predator needs to hunt its prey.
Bachiraās eyes were wide in the darkness of the pitchā the dirty, faded lights providing little more illumination than the moon itself could provideā shining. It sent a shiver down Rinās spine.
He should have been afraid, should have shivered in fearā but all he could feel was excitement. That surge of adrenaline before a competition that left you feeling shaky and almost high on endorphins.
āReady, Rin-chan?ā Bachiraās voice was playful, his mouth curving into a wicked smile, teeth flashing. His joyful honey-gold eyes had fallen into something deeper, something darker, something like madness.
Rin rolled the ball under his foot, just to feel the curve of it against his skinā cleats or any form of shoes had been forsaken in Bachiraās hurried escape from Saeās apartmentā and felt a small smile of his own pull against the sides of his lips, āTch. Donāt expect me to go easy on you.ā
And as he arched his foot back to curve the ball perfectly, gracefully, artfully into the goal, he couldāve sworn Bachira whispered, āWouldn't dream of it.ā
Notes:
All i can do right now is obsess over All Quiet on the Western Front (the 2022 movie). I want to read the book so bad but i'm overwhelmed by work and cant read anything right now šš
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE watch the movie (or at least look it up) its soooooo good. i need to spread the awareness of it idek im crazy for this movie.
next chapter is probs gonna take forever too bc idk its gonna be tense and the dynamics are so hardd to write š
lowkey felt lost in the sauce writing this entire chapter
Chapter 5
Summary:
āRināā His body felt heavy, and he reached through what felt like tar forā for something to grasp. He needed to⦠there was something he had to hold on to.
Rinās face twisted into a frown, āWhy donāt you have it?ā Asking this seemed to distress him deeply. Like it was a question he shouldnāt have to pose.
āHave what?ā Sae looked at his brotherās face, saw how his words shattered the striker like glass. His leg throbbed like the question had hurt it, too.
Notes:
im sosoososso sorry for the long wait šš
but for some reason the plot of this chapter (especially how to start it) escaped me for a few weeks before it finally came to me at like midnight on some random weekday, then it took forever for me to finish.
ig it just had to marinate in my brain for a bit, i dunno
anyways, thanks for reading!
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
Thereās blood on the floor.
Sae blinked and the world seemed to shift, narrowing in on deep, endless red. Before, he wasnāt quite sure what he sawā in his mind, the impression of leather, a taste of metal, the dark shine of an indistinct colorā but now the pool of sanguine liquid at his feet was all he could see.
He took in a shaky breath, felt the seat of a car under his fingertips, felt sweat drip down the back of his neck.
Sae couldn't remember how heād gotten there, how he knew it was a car, not a bus, not a truck. He just knew, like one knew to pull their hand away from hot metal. It was a kind of infallible feeling. He was certainly correct.
There was an odd stillness to the scene. A perfection that put Sae off kilter, leaving him with the vague sense that something should be happening but wasnāt.
The blood shimmered under a pale light that he couldn't quite understandā was it yellow, was it blue, was it orange, was it gray, maybe?
The faint sound of his own voice echoed in his head, I canāt remember? Is that weird?
Sae didnāt dwell on it.
There was a buzzing in his ears, a sick parody of a melody. He knew at once it was from the carās radio, and that there was nothing that he wanted more in the world than for it to turn off. He knew the song, even if he didnāt hear the words. Knew that it was in Spanish, knew that it was slow, sad, and way too real. Almost unbearable.
Itās too loud. I want to leave.
He was suddenly aware of the size of his own body, taking up the left seat of the car. He was sitting in the back. He knew that in front of him was the driverā felt in his heart the vague impressions of the left, right, front, back, inside, and outside of the car.
But the driver wasnāt speaking.
What did his voice sound like?
The scene around him wavered, grew fuzzy. The driver was driving. Front left, at the wheel. Sae was sitting. Back left, by the door. He could feel the cold kiss of glass against his head, the sticky leather against his hands, the weight of his phone in his pocket.
What direction is the car facing? He paused to consider the thoughtā because something felt odd, like maybe the car had been in a differentā
With a sudden certainty, a thought echoed through his head; I should call Rin.
Sae reached for his phone, felt the slide of his hand into his pocket, felt the hum of the carās motor beneath him, anticipated the cold metal of his phone against his fingertips.
He reached, and felt nothing.
Sae dug his nails into his legs and felt it like fire.
Where is my phone?
It seemed imperative that he found it immediately. He knew in his bones that something was going to happen (his left leg ached with a certainty that felt more real than anything ever had). He absolutely needed to call Rin.
But Sae was forgetting something, wasnāt he?
āAre you alright, sir?ā
The words echoed through the air, somehow soundless, yet still able to be heard. It was the driver speakingā who else would it be? Though from the man came no voice, no movement.
Sae shifted in his seat, felt a spark of pain light the nerves of his left leg on fire (and that seemed oddly specific, didnāt it? Yet at the same time it felt exactly right. Certain in the same way he knew he was in a car.)
He tried to speak and was suddenly struck by his inability to do so. His throat was tight, clogged up with an unspoken emotion. Yet he felt calm. There was nothing wrong in the car, was there?
No, Sae paused, glancing at his feet, at the crimson puddle that was much bigger than he remembered, Thereās blood on the floor.
There was the feeling of water on his hands now, steady drops. Like light rain.
In the background, the staticky, haunted sound of the radio. A gentle drip, drip, drip as the puddle grew.
It was then that Saeās eyes caught on a hand, the driverās hand, hanging at an odd angle from the front left of the car. Wrong, was what he wanted to say, but the scene somehow felt right. Like a perfect transition.
The car had stopped, but he couldnāt have told you when.
Thereās blood on the floor.
His leg throbbed. He thought of Rin again. Wanted to call.
But his phoneā
Sae didnāt remember where his phone was. Hadnāt it just been in his pocket?
Maybe heā
āI need to borrow your phone.ā Sae forced the words from his throat, turning towards the driver. He looked up at the manās face, knew that he was seeing a face yet could only imagine the blurry parody of one.
He was struck by a distant confusion. What did the driver look like, exactly? In his mind, the blurred suggestion of a face that could have belonged to anyone. Why canāt I remember?
The driverās not-face turned at an odd angle, neck twisting in a way that seemed wrong, āOkay. But how will that help you?ā Sae knew that in this moment the man was staring, eyes (Had they been brown? Green? Blue? Why canāt I remember?) wide with a kind of confusion or astonishment.
Sae sniffed, frowned when the air smelled vaguely burnt and metallic, then cocked his head to the side, āExcuse me?ā The words rolled off his tongue flatly, with no inflection. He found that heād spoken more to have something to answer with rather than due to any offense at the driverās question.
āOh, no.ā The driver panicked for a moment in a way that heād seen many times. In a way that told Sae he seemed offended at the other manās words, and the driver cared enough to stress over this. āNo. I just find it kind of silly that you're trying to call your brother.ā
This made him pause. Heād never said anything about calling Rin.
Or had he?
While he chewed on that thought, the driverās neck craned some more, cracking dreadfully, to focus the manās gaze better on the backseat of the car.
āYou donāt know his number, afterall.ā The driver continued to speak, yet not speak. There was no sound to associate with him, no voice. Yet Sae knew he was speaking, knew that he was saying these strange words. āSo even if you could call him, you really couldn't, could you?ā
Andā
Sae couldnāt deny the truth of that. But instead of saying something so damning as āThatās correct.ā he turned his gaze back to his feet. He didnāt want to stare at the manās blurred face anymore. It was easier to focus on the hand, the blood. They were rendered in such clear detail that he felt a kind of safety in seeing them. A safety in knowing, for certain.
It was predictable, the way light illuminated the blood. It was calming, to watch the slight ripple of motion of the puddle as drops of blood trickled down the handās fingertips. It was easy to see the handās structure and acknowledge its five fingers, the red coating its surface, the scrapes scattered along its length and its hair and the texture of its skin.
Sae found it much easier than looking at the driver, whose face he could not recall.
Again, he was struck with a deep confusion. What am I forgetting?
āYou donāt have it.ā The driver said, and this time he had a voice, except it wasnāt his. It sounded a lot likeā
Rin?
Saeās head snapped up.
In the driverās place was none other than his younger brother, his face defined with a stark clarity. The sculpted lines of his cheekbones, the cut of his jaw, the familiar curve of his lashes, the tourmaline of his eyes. He was wearing the driverās clothes, but standing now.
It made Sae blink, and realize he was standing as well. Realize that the driver must have been Rin all along. Realize that they werenāt in the car anymore, but were standing in a bar. And that made sense, too. Again, he knew it with a specific certainty.
āRināā His body felt heavy, and he reached through what felt like tar forā for something to grasp. He needed to⦠there was something he had to hold on to.
Rinās face twisted into a frown, āWhy donāt you have it?ā Asking this seemed to distress him deeply. Like it was a question he shouldnāt have to pose.
āHave what?ā Sae looked at his brotherās face, saw how his words shattered the striker like glass. His leg throbbed like the question had hurt it, too.
Summoning what courage he had left, Sae asked the question again; āRin, have what?ā
Instead of responding, Rin worked his jaw once, twice. Like he was chewing on something, or perhaps grinding his teeth. The thought made Sae uneasy. He had to swallow down the urge to scold his brother with a gentle āthat could damage your teeth, you knowā. (It hurt to think that once they had been close enough for him to utter such a remark.)
Silence continued to stretch between them. Sae tried to ask the question again with his eyes, staring intently to prompt Rinās answer, but his brother just looked at him with this sad expression. Like he was watching him dig his own grave. It made his skin itch. His leg throbbed.
āHave what?ā He stressed, each syllable falling from his mouth desperately. It seemed certain that the answer to this question was of the utmost importanceā perhaps as important as lungs are for breathing, or a heart for pumping blood.
Yet, Rin continued with his silence.
Sae stepped forward, unable to stop himself, but Rin only seemed to grow farther away. He stepped forward again, again, again, but his brother only seemed to fall further out of his sight.
There was a crowd now, in the bar, creating a droning sound like rushing water that drowned out any and all conversation.
Rin was moving, still, ever more distant. The crowd seemed to swallow him with each passing second.
A clock chimed.
āWait, Iām sorryāā Sae choked on his own breath, tried to run after Rin but found that all the strength had been sapped from his limbs. He was moving as fast as he could, gravity weighing heavy on his body, and he just couldnāt keep up.
He stumbled, left leg buckling with a sharp pain, and nearly fell to the floor. Heād taken his gaze off the crowd for no more than a few seconds, but Rin was already so much further ahead. It was hard to even see him, amongst the crushing hoard of bodies.
For a fearful moment, Sae thought heād lost sight of Rin completely.
But then he caught the flash of his near-black hair amongst dozens of heads, defined in the half-light of the bar, and sprung back into motion.
He tried to move faster, heart pounding in his ears, and opened his mouth to say āAnswer me!ā or āStop acting foolish, Rin! Come back!ā but instead found himself crying out almost desperately in a voice that didnāt sound like his own; āIām sorry!ā
But it was too late. Rin had disappeared in the unforgiving tide of the crowd.
The bar suddenly seemed to be at once too full and too quiet, the crowd pushing up uncomfortably against its edges and overflowing the space dangerously, all without sound. An eerie feeling settled in the atmosphere, something coming off as not quite right.
There was a kind of tension in the air that made Saeās chest acheā an uneasiness that filled the room with sludge until his heart pounded under its weight, significantly slowed.
It made him want to leave. To run. Except he couldnāt do that anymore, could he? As he tried frantically to step away, his left leg throbbed mercilessly in protest, threatening to buckle again.
Sae felt himself grow irrationally angry at himself. So angry that his hands were curling into fists, his jaw clenching, his fingers itching to dig into something and tear until he couldnāt thinkā
He paused, took in a shaky breath, and swallowed in something between disgust and disbelief.
Japanās Genius was cool-headed, unflappable.
And Sae wasnāt a genius anymore.
He was a second-rate loser (a voice in his head whispered that he was beneath even that, the scum found at the bottom of a childās cleats, the worst of the worst midfielders in the world).
Sae felt something inexplicable drain out of him.
The press of bodies suddenly became all he was aware of. Theyād been tolerable, before, in the midst of his mad dash, but now the sweaty, hot, sticky feeling of their skin made him tremble in place.
The crowd ebbed and flowed like a tide, pushing him in one direction only to pull him in another.
At once, the floor felt less than solid, and Sae felt adrift.
Like the world was turning to dust beneath his feet, and he would be left to stare desolately at the aftermath.
He was grounded back in reality as a strangerās body slammed into his weaker left side.
Saeās vision went white-hot, and the bar faded into a blur of color and sound. Before the agony fully hit him, he distantly wondered if this is what it felt like to be in a fever-fueled delirium, because nothing seemed to make sense in his life right now.
There was a sharper, more insistent ripple of pain as the crowd began to shove against him, prone on the floor as he was.
He shut his eyes tight and tried to breathe, to stand, but found himself trembling so hard that he could barely prop himself up.
Make it stop make it stop make it stopā
Iām sorryā
Rinā
He writhedā a futile attempt to ease the painā and found himself blinking at the ceiling of his apartment. His left leg continued to throb. The blankets were twisted around him like a vice.
He blinked again. Felt his eyebrows furrowing together in confusion.
It came to him all at once, in a rush.
Dreaming.
Heād been dreaming.
Sae lay still for a moment, staring at nothing. His eyelids were heavy with exhaustion, though a glance at the clock on his nightstand told him heād slept in well past noon.
Heād been dreaming.
It was hard to believe. It had felt so real in a way that dreams had never felt to him before. The shine of the light against the surface of the puddle of blood, the smell of smoke and iron, the feeling of leather against his fingers, the sound of Rinās voice echoing in his ears.
Saeās heart was still pounding. His confusion, his frustration, the driver, Rinās face, the car, lingered in the forefront of his mind.
He didnāt dream often. Closer to never. To dream at all, to remember the dream, and for it to be something so disconcertingā
It was impossible to dismiss.
(In the back of his mind, the feeling that his luck was running out, that there was a clock ticking closer and closer to zero, an endless countdown to his next doom. The distinct feeling of dread and impending loss, of an uncertain future.)
Sae shook himself violently, and resolved to think of the dream no longer. It had probably just been a side effect of his medication, or perhaps the pain itself.
With a jerk, he rolled out of bed, feeling the firey pain in his leg spike in a now-familiar way that meant his meds were wearing off. It was a painfully damning sensation, one that reminded him deeply of the fact that his leg would never be the same again. (That he was no longer Japanās Genius, simply Sae.)
In the background, there was the sound of rushing water. No doubt it was Rin taking a shower. He had a tact for choosing to occupy the bathroom at the most inconvenient times possible. The prime example being now, when Saeās medicine was located in the bathroomā mind you, the only bathroom his apartment hostedā and Rin would certainly not let him in until he was finished showering.
Which would not be for a while. The thought sent Sae into a silent kind of rage, and he gritted his teeth in annoyance.
During their unfortunate time together, Sae had discovered that Rin was fond of taking showers so long as to make one wonder if the bathroom was flooding. Sometimes, Sae even grew worried, wondering if his younger brother was attempting to drown, or somehow utilize the shower curtain to hang himself.
Such things werenāt founded in reality, however, and heād come to the inevitable conclusion that Rin was doing this simply to get on his nerves.
Afterall, that seemed to be the strikerās favorite activity.
(Needless to say, the past few weeks had been more than hellish for the both of them. Sae was more than ready to be healed, if only to have his younger brother gone from his house.)
With an exhaled huff of breath that was more of a snarl than anything else, Sae resolved to busy himself with breakfastā or, rather, a really late brunch, what with the timeā while he waited for access to the bathroom.
He stood, and was immediately frustrated. Heād healed a lot in the last few weeks. Enough that weight on his leg caused more of a dull, fiery ache rather than a sharp, overwhelming, white-lightning kind of sensation. Yet still, there was pain. There was still weakness.
Sae was aware that it might eventually go away, with work. Heād seen countless athletes in his league bounce back from injuries to play close to their original caliber of soccer.
Butā
It was different for him.
He didnāt want to be close to his previous level of success. He didnāt want a āit might happenā in response to his return to soccer. He wouldnāt settle for it.
(A small voice in the back of his mind whispered that maybe he didnāt want anything at all anymore. Maybe it was better to fall out of the limelight and sink slowly into the desolate darkness of his new life. To accept his failure without pretending success was possible. To simply give up.)
Sae paused to blink at himself in the mirror placed neatly in the corner of his room. A horrible gift Shidou had bought him years ago so he could 'Appreciate his beautiful selfā that now seemed more mocking than anything else. Because the man that stared back at him wasnāt beautiful anymore.
No.
He wasnāt even Sae Itoshi.
The man before him was a sick parody of Japanās Genius Midfielder. Haunting in his disgustingly soft physique, his horrid posture, his visibly weakened leg. There was nothing that was even adjacent to the midfielder in this strangerās body.
It was hard to even associate the image with himselfā easier to think of it as a separate person.
Sae just couldnāt accept how he was now.
ā¦
When the sound of the shower cut off, Sae found himself staring listlessly at the blank screen of the TV.
Heād gotten himself through the motions of the morningā getting dressed, eating breakfast, leaving his roomā only to find himself unable to move past that.
He told himself it was due to Rinās occupation of the bathroom, but deep down he knew it wasnāt. Heād been slipping, in the past few weeks, into a kind of numbness. He didnāt do his skin care anymore. Didnāt care to follow his diet. Didnāt bother with most of the treatments he should be doing for his leg.
Sae felt this feelingā this misery, this desolationā settling in his chest like poison, until he stopped all motion and simply sat down to do absolutely nothing.
(Wasnāt it horrible that doing nothing still made him exhausted?)
Rinās footsteps echoed in the hall, dull thuds against wood, made slightly less offensive by the fact that his brother refused to go anywhere without wearing socks.
And he knew this meant he should turn the TV onā that he should look busy before Rin was able to witness his pathetic display and comment on itā yet he didnāt move.
It wasnāt long before Rin entered the main living space.
Sae could just barely catch the odd twist of Rinās face in the corner of his eyeā In his mind, Rinās face on the driverās body, angry, unwilling to explainā before the striker was stomping over to him.
Placing himself directly in front of his line of sight, Rin managed to look absolutely livid even with the limp quality of his still-damp hair, āWhat the fuck are you doing?ā
Sae blinked, felt his face scrunch up in confusion in what seemed like slow motion, āIs there something you want from me?ā There was a part of him that absolutely refused to admit that he had been doing nothing, and it was so easy to meet Rinās barbed words with a question of his own that he knew would provoke another argument.
And it was so easy to argue. In the past few weeks, it seemed to be all that they could do with each other. Sae had started to believe that maybe his real brother had been swapped out for an imposterā It was hard to believe that the same Rin who had looked up at him with those wide, curious eyes with so much admiration could ever be so angry.
If they were really brothers, weren't they supposed to get along?
Heād begun to think that sentiment was something closer to a fairytale. A tool to be used by parents in an attempt to foster goodwill between their hopeless children.
(Clearly, such attempts were not made by their parents. Although Sae couldnāt blame them. They were a pretty hopeless match-up. An intervention probably wouldn't have changed anything.)
In front of him, Rin had spent the last few heartbeats spluttering like Sae had asked him about his crush, āDoā Do I want something from you? Sae, are you fucking kidding me? Do Iā Oh my God.ā At this point, Rin seemed to lose himself a little, reaching to tug on the limp strands of his hair like he was grasping at the straws of his sanity.
Sae apathetically watched his face morph from my-brother-is-so-fucking-annoying to youāve-got-to-be-kidding-me to have-you-thought-for-a-single-day-in-your-life to I-canāt-take-it-anymore in the span of a few seconds.
Heād never been very good at reading people, but Rin was so expressive that all of these expressions had become quite familiar to him now. Especially since he was the one who most often caused them.
āRin.ā Sae promptedā instead of saying what or whyā and this seemed to be the absolute worst thing to say.
His brotherās expression twisted for the nth time in what seemed to be a particularly painful manner. It was a testament to how far heād come that Sae was able to catch the confusion beneath the raw anger of his brotherās expression.
āSaeāā Rin hissed, a mocking imitation of the way Sae had said his own name mere seconds earlier, then paused, as if the word had been reflexive and he didnāt quite favor its taste in his mouth. As if Sae was too distant but nii-chan was too familiar. As if there was still something between them that called for a name but it was too fragile for any form of fond address.
The striker sucked in a breath, began to stumble over his words anew, āI just donāt understandā¦ā There was a defeated quality to his voice, and the anger seemed to at once drain out of him as his shoulders slumped. āWhat is wrong with you?ā
And Sae blinked.
Hard.
Because that last phraseā
It was childish. Tactless. Something he should have expected to fall from Rinās mouth (Heād never quite aged past his teenage years, had he?) but somehow managed to hurt nonetheless.
Sae felt his lips curl, unbidden, as he was overwhelmed with a sudden and intense urge to retaliate. To snap back.
Youāre so uptight, Sae-chan, A voice that sounded much like Shidouās whispered in the back of his mind, No need to be so defensive. Iām not tryna bite.
And Sae knew he shouldn't.
But the past month had been⦠rough, for lack of a better term. All he wanted was for things to be back to normal. For the crash to never have happened and for his leg to be healed. For Rin to leave him alone so that he could stop feeling so hurt every time the striker looked at him like he wasā
Like he was broken.
Like he was nothing if he wasn't Japanās Genius.
Like he was disappointing him in a visceral, irreversible way.
(Looking at him like he had looked at him all those years ago, on that fateful night. Snow falling like frozen tears from the weeping sky, breath frosting in the air in white puffs, the unforgiving lights of the pitch contrasting with the ebony of night. Rinās eyes, wide and frightened, tears clinging to his lashes. Saeās eyes shattered, his face iced over with a detached expression. Sharp words cutting the tension between them like a knife. Both of them walking away, bleeding and wounded, yet baring no true physical damage)
And so, Sae did what he did best. He settled his expression into disdain and stared at Rin like it was his fault they were arguing. Like he was above the entire situation.
It didn't even occur to him to ask what the hell Rin was talking about anymore. He was so uncharacteristically angry that he didnāt care.
āDonāt be like this, Rin.ā He tried not to feel too guilty as Rin froze in place.
āNo. Donāt you turn this on me. Donāt play dumb.ā Here Rin trembled almost violently, like a child wracked with fever, before continuing, āYou were supposed to leave for your physical therapy 20 minutes ago. You promised you would go this time. You promised.ā
Sae felt a shiver of embarrassment make its way down his spine at the tone of Rinās voice. He sounded desperateā no, woundedā over this broken promise.
āOh,ā The soft sound slipped out of Saeās mouth before he could stop it. He swallowed around what felt like shards of glass.
For all he knew, he hadnāt made any promise. Or at least, he didnāt remember making one.
(Part of him considered that Rin was making it all up, assuming things he hadnāt said, but for all he didnāt know about his brother, he knew Rin wasnāt lying. Not about this. Not when his voice wavered with the same intensity that it had when heād fallen to his knees, begging for Sae to stop as he slowly, meticulously ripped their dream to pieces.)
But the worst of it wasā he had known about his physical therapy. And he hadnāt gone. In fact, he hadnāt been going at all.
Each time heād seen the notification pop up on his phone, heād swipe it away. Every call from his doctor, every appointment, heād lie through his teeth. He knew it wasnāt believable, saw it in the way the doctorās mouth would twist with disapproval so obvious even he could catch it. But he kept doing it.
Just like he kept ignoring every text, call, or attempt to reach out from his teammates, from Luna, from his few friends.
āMissed you at practice today. Teamās not the same without you.ā
āWe could use your help as a coach, if youāre up to it.ā
āDonāt lock yourself away forever, Genius.ā
āGet well soon, Itoshi-san!ā
āLashes, I know youāre ignoring me. Donāt make me break into your house. I swear Iāll climb into your window. No cap.ā
āPlay nice with Rin-chan, Sae-san.ā
He ignored it all. Heād even stopped reading what the news articles were saying about him. But he still saw the titles.
āItoshi Out For The Season, Or Maybe For Life?
āJapanās Fallen Genius: Sae Itoshiās Descent From Stardom.ā
āWill Japanese Midfielder Sae Itoshi Ever Set Foot On The Pitch Again?ā
He didnāt give a shit about what they said. Not the doctors. Not his teammates. Not Luna. Not Shidou, not Rin, and certainly not any of their half-baked friends.
But he especially didnāt care about any of the articles.
(Or at least, thatās what he told himself)
Yet Rin cared. Sae could see it in the twist of his face as he stood in front of him, waiting for something. Maybe he was waiting for Sae to apologize, to say āOh,ā with a little more clarity, like waking up from a dream, and to follow with āI didnāt realize. Iām sorry. Iāll go to my PT right away.ā
Which Sae wouldn't do.
His leg was ruined. It wasnāt going to be the same. Physical therapy wouldnāt magically heal it, and certainly wouldn't allow him to play soccer again. He might as well do nothing with it. It was better than chasing the shadow of his previous self, of his previous leg.
Deep down, some sick part of him was filled with some kind of security knowing that a lack of PT might lead to a permanent limp, or an inability to walk.
At least then, the world would stop watching himā would stop their clamour over his possible return. They would accept he was useless and leave him the fuck alone. As the truth set in, Rin would stop looking at him with those sad, yearning eyes of his. With those eyes that hoped he could still be the striker heād been all those years ago. That hoped he could be even close to his old level of skill.
It would be kinder.
Then Sae wouldnāt have to put into words how much he hatedā
āAre you even listening to me?ā Rin shouted, sudden and snappish. Like he'd been talking for a while, realized he was being given no response, and finally reached his breaking point. āYouāre not even going to try to get ready? To show up?ā He made to grab for somethingā maybe Saeās crutches, maybe Sae himselfā but was quickly stopped in his tracks as Sae broke his silence.
āIām not.ā The midfielder stated, plainly, wondering why his throat suddenly felt so tight as he forced the words out. At Rinās dead stare (perhaps of confusion, or shock, or something else, he wasnāt sure) he added: āGoing to show up.ā
The clarification didnāt help. In fact, it seemed to flip a switch.
Rinās expression rebooted. Like a calculator being reset, his muscles loosened until his face was no longer angry, no longer confused, no longer shocked. He blinked, once, twice, as if in a stupor. He shook his head, tilted it to the side a little like he was trying to shake water out of his ears, as if he hadnāt heard correctly.
āYouāre really not going to try?ā His voice was pitifully smallā and not in a quiet, meek way. Rather, he was speaking with no inflection, just a neutral voice, a neutral face. His eyes were fixed on some unknowable point in the distance. Like all the fight had drained out of his body, leaving behind an empty shell of himself.
(It was sickening to think that this was exactly what Sae saw in his own face when he looked in the mirror.)
Sae trembled, opened his mouthā in a reflexive motion to comfort, something he hadnāt done for yearsā before he caught himself.
What was he even going to say?
Nothing could breach the gap between them. If heād learned anything from their constant fighting it was that.
They were hopeless.
Sae was hopeless.
And he was dragging Rin down with him.
āStop it.ā Sae said, praying his voice wouldnāt tremble, āYou donāt have to.ā Care, bother, stay was left unspoken.
He took a deep breath as Rin continued to stare at him blankly with that sick, robotic look, and tried to make his heart stop beating so violently that it hurt. Afterall, this was better for Rin.
Sae could see the toll taking care of him was taking. He had seen the horrible expression on his face when he learned about his shattered leg, his ruined career (as if that hurt him more than anything elseā as if he was worthless were he not Japanās Genius Midfielder) He had seen the angry yet stressful trembles of Rinās limbs when their parents told him not so long ago that āYou donāt mind caring for your older brother, do you Rin?ā and left it at that.
He hated it.
Rin was poisoned by his presence.
Yet he wouldnāt leave. Why wouldnāt he leave? He just needed to leaveā
āI donātā¦ā Rinās voice was still flat, still soft. It echoed ominously throughout the small apartment. There wasnāt much furnishing, and all sounds seemed magnified in its emptiness. āI donāt understand.ā Here his voice rose, pitched in a tone that suggested anger yet was so stern it sounded foreign on his lips.
Sae waited for him to say more, but he didnāt.
The room fell into a silence like death. Too still and too cold, the air misty with the thick smell of fear, of rage, of despair. An atmosphere that made it hard to breathe, hard to think.
Maybe that was why he ignored the instinctive, animal part of his hind-brain that encouraged stillness, silence, until the tension in the air was broken by Rinās inevitable departure. Maybe that was why, despite the tension, despite that sick, unsettled feeling in his stomach, he broke the silence. Maybe that was why Sae let the next words slip out his mouth.
āI forgot to grab my medicine earlier. You were in the shower.ā He said, and found that pretending nothing had happened was much easier than it should have been. āCould you grab it for me?ā He ignored the lingering ache in his chest at the thought that he was doing it again.
Shidouās voice, in his mind.
Youāre so uptight, Sae-chan.
Why are you always pretending, Lashes? Life aināt a movie, and youāre not an actor.
Hmm, tell me whatcha really think. I know you're lying.
Andā why did he always think of his words?
But Sae already knew the answer. He was a difficult person. Snappish, with venom-laced words accompanied by a face that refused to express much more than boredom. Or perhaps disdain. Maybe disgust. He was good at showing those emotions, too.
Simply put, he was an asshole. An apathetic bastard.
But Shidou had never cared about that. Heād wormed his way into Saeās life, unwanted, and rooted himself there until his presence had become comfort. Until seeing him, bantering with him, became enough to make Sae crack a small smile. To feel a little bit of warmth in his chest.
(To enjoy playing soccer, again, after years of seeing it as nothing more than a job. To feel the atmosphere of the pitch like sunlight and freedom rather than a desolate land ice and blood. To find calm in numbers and calculations that heād lost touch with, that heād placed in the same category as the thrice-damned equations and numbers he had struggled with in school.)
And Sae hadnāt had many friends before him.
So maybe that was whyā
Maybe that was why Shidouās words mattered so much, hurt so much. Why his actions and voice left unwelcome memories in Saeās brain.
(In his mind, infinite snapshots of memories. The bar. Rinās voice, loud. The buzz of voices, of his thoughts. Ringing in his ears. Blood spraying. Swaying on his feet. The crack of bone. The disgust painting Shidouās face. And then, the sickly colors of the hospital. Rinās desperate eyes, his angry face. The sad look of disbelief, of disappointment, of shallow hope, in Shidouās eyes. His uncertain smile. Words, thrown at each other like knives, drawing blood. Shidouās half-step back. His choice to leave.)
Rinās gaze was suddenly too much to bear, imperious and intimidating, as he turned his head with a robotic jerk. The motion was delayed, long after Saeās words had echoed throughout the air. As if he was a puppet being moved by a puppeteer and the motion wasnāt quite his own. Like heād lost autonomy over himself.
Saeās heart was suddenly racing and he felt sweat drip down his neck.
Fuck.
There was the feeling that his luck had run out, the clock had stopped ticking. The timer that had been counting down the seconds to his end had finally stilled.
Now, a part of himself was saying, Itās happening now.
Rin opened his mouth to speak, seemed to snap back into himself with a trembling rush of anger, āAre you fucking messing with me? Seriously? I canāt believe you.ā He shook his head so violently it seemed to make him dizzy, and he stumbled. Took a step back. Sae felt his nails dig into his palms, drawing blood. āWhy are you always acting like this? Like someoneās fucking child? Youāre older than meā I justā¦ā He paused, grasping for words in the apartmentās eerie silence.
Sae didnāt speak. Watched Rin blink desperately as he stared around the apartment, like someone might jump out and help him make sense of the mess between them.
No one did.
Shakily, Rin seemed to find his footing again, āYouāre such an asshole, you know?ā He let his words sink into the air, eyes lingering on Sae.
As if he was waiting for something.
As if he thought Sae might fill the silence between them with āI know. Iām sorry, Rin.ā
But he didnāt.
Because it was better if Rin left.
(Not because his heart was pounding, aching, so violently he thought he might die. Not because heād tried to force any words out of his lips, only to find that his throat was tight with shame, with fear. Not because he was a coward who didnāt know how to apologize, or how to stop lying if Rin wasnāt far away from him. Not because the truthā about how he felt, about what he wanted for his futureā would hurt Rin more than anything, and he couldnāt bear it.)
Rin shuddered, face twisting as he backed up another half-step as if Sae was an abhorrent creature. āSo youāre just going to give up? To quit soccer? Just like that?ā
Sae flinched at the harsh words, felt his blood chill under the barrage of questions.
Like a shark swarming blood, like a predator smelling weakness, Rin dug in with his teeth, āIf you donāt try, youāre going to lose your career. Your fame. Everything that makes you special. Everything that matters.ā
Everything thatā
Sae felt his chest tighten with anger, with fear.
Was that what his brother really cared about? His career?
āSo what? Maybe I want to quit soccer. Maybe I donāt give a shit. Just stay out of my fucking life, Rin.ā The words came out harsher, louder, than heād ever intended.
Rin stilled.
Saeās body trembled.
His brotherās next words were like a death knell.
āYou know what? See if I care. Donāt take care of yourself and let your life fall into pieces.ā He took a deep breath, tourmaline eyes flashing with an undefined swirl of emotions, āIām leaving.ā
Andā
Rin had said similar things many times.
Iām sick of your bullshit, Sae.
Fuck you. Help yourself, then.
Iām leaving.
But he never did. At least, not for long. Not forever.
Yetā
It felt different, this time.
Final.
The door clicked softly behind Rin as he left, like he hadnāt even had enough fight left in him to slam it.
Sae blinked, stared listlessly at the view of the city from his apartmentās windows. It was bright, lively, loud.
His leg suddenly felt on fire.
My medicine, he recalled dimly.
But he didnāt move to get it.
Notes:
Finally we reached the big fight. I hope the build up was worth it! I kinda feel like maybe it fell off but also maybe it ate? Canāt say.
And the fic is now officially over halfway finished!! 3 chapters to go!!! Which⦠I love this fic but Iām gonna be relieved when itās finished bc I got some other stuff I wanna work on.
SPEAKING OF!!
Mindless Myung-gi (Player 333) hate actually boils my blood so Iām genuinely gonna have to do a character study of him šš
...like stop doing my boy so wrong⦠he sucks and makes bad choices but he aināt malicious. ššš
Chapter 6
Summary:
It shouldāve been easy.
It shouldāve been the easiest decision of his life.
(And yet, Rin felt like leaving had torn him in two. For when had Rin Itoshi ever not been a half of Sae Itoshi? What had happened to them? When had they gone from the Itoshi brothers to just Rin and just Sae? Didnāt they love each other? Rin loved Sae. Maybe Sae had always hated Rin.)
Notes:
BRO TELL ME WHY. THE INTERNET HAS GATEKEPT BABY NESS FROM ME? BC WHO IS THIS DIVA I LOVE HIM OMG HES SO CUTEEEE
if i didnāt love my current pfp so much iād change it to be little ness šš
anyways⦠hereās the next chapter!!!
Sorry for the long wait! I was rlly low on motivation for a lot of it and had to wait for it all to click and come together.
Now for Rinās POV after the big fight heheh š
(ignore any grammar mistakes hahaha I proofread this while I was super tired)
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
As the door clicked shut gently behind him, Rin came to a standstill. Then, in a moment of weakness, he wavered on his feet, caught between falling against the door for support or giving in to gravityās clutches and simply face-planting on the ground. Eventually he settled for neither, and continued to stand.
Uncertain.
Lost.
He felt a lot like he was poised on the edge of a cliff. Or perhaps like heād already tumbled off of it.
Thinking of Saeās face, of the words that left his mouth in that unhurried, patronizing way of his, of the anger that had begun to burn in the midfielderās eyes, of the numbness that had settled in his own heart, Rin figured the latter was the truth.
Heād fallen off the cliffās edge, and there was no way to return to the top. His feet had left the rock, heād already hit the water. His fingers had already scrabbled desperately for purchase against the unforgiving sharpness of the rocks at the cliffās base, and heād already found it to be hopeless. And now, he was sinking into the oceanās icy depths, drowning in the aftermath of his choices. Drowning in the realization that there was nothing for him to hold onto anymore.
(That there was nothing that could bridge the gaping wound that had been rendered between him and his brother.)
Standing in the hallway, clinging to the sound of his own stuttering breath in the otherwise silent air, trying not to feel so alone, Rin knew there wasnāt a way to take back what heād saidā to forget what Sae had said.
He couldnāt turn around and open that door again.
Heād said he was leaving, and for once it was final.
I really meant it this time. I left. The thought was so foreign as to bring goosebumps to his arms, and he felt at once like he was drowning but also like heād been shocked back to life.
And wasnāt it terrible that he felt happier than he had in months? That finally being free of Sae left him with enough room to breathe, to feel like himself again? Wasnāt it terrible that, despite the rage, the sorrow, the numbness, a part of him was whispering that he should've left a long time ago?
Rinās chest was suddenly aching with a vengeance, his lungs burning in a way that felt like drowning.
The muscles in his jaw ticked, his teeth clenching, as the ache intensified even as he tried to breathe through it. The door at his back seemed as once too close and too far awayā a cliff he couldnāt climb but was still swept against by the unforgiving tide, a cliff that was jagged yet promised solid land, a cliff that made him tremble for fear of being dashed to pieces yet grounded him in the landless, bottomless ocean heād descended into.
It was all he could do to tremble desperately in its shadow.
For all his confidence that heād fallen off the cliffās edgeā that he was leavingā he couldnāt seem to step away. Nor could he bear to step back.
Rin shoved a shaking hand over his mouth before he could embarrass himself with something as lukewarm as crying aloud.
What will the neighbors think? A part of him, distant yet insistent, asked.
Then: Theyāll probably be glad the fightingās over. All you did with Sae was argue.
Andā
Rin bit down on his hand to stifle the swell of pain in his chest. He bit down until he tasted metal, because that was better than tasting salt. That was better than letting a sound escape his mouth that might carry through the door.
He would not cry over this.
Sae didnāt deserve his tears.
Sae didnāt deserve anything from him anymore.
He didnātā
He didnāt deserve to have Rinās care, Rinās love.
He was nothing but an ungrateful narcissistic bastard. Afterall, he was too busy wallowing in his own self-pity to see just how much Rin was giving up to see him better. How much of his own fucking soccer season he was throwing away for a shitty brother whoād done nothing but waste away.
So why was it so hard to strip that away from him?
It shouldāve been easy.
It shouldāve been the easiest decision of his life.
(And yet, Rin felt like leaving had torn him in two. For when had Rin Itoshi ever not been a half of Sae Itoshi? What had happened to them? When had they gone from the Itoshi brothers to just Rin and just Sae? Didnāt they love each other? Rin loved Sae. Maybe Sae had always hated Rin.)
He bit down harder, feeling bone beneath his flesh, when the ache in his chest seemed to freeze all the air in his lungs.
Then, with a sudden clarity, he pulled his hand away from his mouth. Stared at the darkening impressions of his teeth on his hand. Watched the revolting sheen of his own spit slathered on his skin.
āWhat the fuck am I doing?ā The words echoed through the empty hall.
Maybe he was crazy.
Maybe heād hung out with Bachira too much lately and had contracted part of his disease.
That being said, maybe he was hallucinating this. Maybe this was a dream. Everything had seemed so surreal lately, since Saeās crash. Since heād seen it on the news and felt the life he knew crumble to dust within seconds.
But Rin knew better.
If heād been dreaming, Sae would have said something pathetic like āIām sorryā or āDonāt, Rināā in a way that meant āPlease stayā more than it meant āForgive meā because Rin knew, deep down, heād never be able to forgive his brother.
But maybe he could have stayed.
Could have.
Not anymore, though.
Not when heād tried so hard to convince Sae to go to therapy, only to be met with apathy and then anger.
Not when Sae had the audacity to say that he was giving upā that maybe he didnāt give a shit anymore.
He wasnātā
He wasnāt allowed to give up.
Not after everything.
Sae giving up soccer wasā it didnāt make sense. Soccer was everything to him. Everything to both of them.
Itoshi and Soccer went together like Rin went with Prodigy and Sae went with Genius.
Sae saying he was quitting⦠that was like renouncing who he was as a person. Like throwing down his hands and saying, āIām done living this life. Iām done being an Itoshi.ā
And Rin wouldnāt have that.
He wouldnāt fucking have that.
Or at leastā
Rin took a shuddering breath, felt cold water lapping at his chest and pulling him down, down, down with sodden fingers.
He had insisted he wouldnāt have that.
But Sae wasnāt his problem anymore. He was leaving.
So why was he still standing in front of the goddamn door?
ā¦
The heat was oppressive that morning, the sun glaring down like it had a personal vendetta against Rin.
As he walked down the streetā the air shimmering across cars and pavement alike, everything seeming like an illusion in the too-bright midday heatā it felt very much like the world was against him.
Now, instead of feeling like he was drowning in the cold clutches of the ocean, he got to experience what it felt like to be washed ashore on foreign lands and boiled under an unforgiving sky.
(That is, Rin had the pleasure of no longer being in peace with his own turmoil. Now, he was able to view just how much he mattered in the grand scheme of thingsā which was very little, apparently, what with the way the world kept turning, and the happiness all the citizens of Madrid seemed to radiate. Where was his happiness? Lost somewhere between that snowy night and his decision to care for his brother, he supposed.)
It was starting to become painfully obvious to Rin that anyone cursed with the surname Itoshi was doomed to have bad luck.
As he walked aimlessly down the street away from Saeās apartmentā though he had no clue where he was going to do once he made it āfar enoughā away, whatever that meantā Madrid bustled with a tireless energy that couldnāt help but feel offensive.
In a moment where he wanted nothing but silence, the cityās clamour filled the stagnant air. Peopleās voices rose and fell with the musical cadence of the native language, and it was beautiful even without understanding. Cars and trucks honked urgently as traffic slowed to a crawl. Parents, children, siblings, and couples alike went on with daily routines like nothing was wrong.
Like there was no other place in the world where they could be so happy, even on this brutally hot day.
Like the city itself was shoving in his face that no matter what he was feeling, no matter what Sae had said, the world would keep spinning. It wouldnāt wait for Saeās recovery. It wouldnāt wait for Rin to learn how to live in the aftermath of their fight.
If they didnāt do something, it was clear what would happen.
Theyād get left behind.
Or, ratherā Sae would get left behind.
Because the world wasnāt waiting for them, and Rin was tired of dragging them forward to keep up. Saeās dead weight was his own problem now. It was up to him whether he sank or swamā Rin couldnāt keep them both afloat anymore.
And if there was one thing he knew, it was that he wasnāt going to drown with Sae.
So heād let go.
He was leaving.
Full stop.
And maybe, leaving like this would teach Sae a lesson. Show him how much Rin had been doing, how much he had been caring. Maybe heād finally blink and snap out of the illusion he was in, tuning back into reality. Tuning back into soccer and stopping his endless descent into despair. Perhaps he would learn how to swim again, how to live.
Rin startled at the sudden and incessant honking of a horn close by.
His gaze jerked upwards, and the world seemed to snap back into place all at once, flooding him with information heād been ignoring. The hot pavement underneath his feet, the bright, shining white of the crosswalk. A car, sleek and sparkling, close to his side. The driver, face contorted half by rage, half by fear. The sound of a window rolling down.
Then, a flood of panic and shame as he registered words being spoken, recognizing none.
But the anger was clear enough.
āUmāā Rin ducked his head, almost reflexively, trying (and probably failing) to relax his face enough from its scowl to convey his apologies, āSorryā¦ā
The driver made a dramatic motion with their hand as he hurriedly finished crossing the street, heart pounding in his ears.
He quickly merged with the crowd again, deeply disturbed at the reminder of the cityās life.
It was overwhelming even compared to the cities heād visited in Japan, and heād never really gone sightseeing in Paris. Heād been too busy training, and hadnāt ever favored cities anyway.
They were always too much. Too many noises, too many distractions, too many occurrences, too many peopleā too many eyes. Even submerged in the traffic of the sidewalk, he could feel gazes brush against his skin like unwanted insects, leaving behind a feeling of disgust. Of uncleanliness.
Absently, Rin itched at the back of his neck, muscles tensing as he ducked his head and tried not to get too close to anyone. It was hard, in such a crowded place. The city was flooded with mindless npcs that seemed at once judgemental and indifferent.
Not one of them seemed to care for personal space, and Rin was left to feel the revolting touch of sweaty skin as he continued to navigate the clogged sidewalks.
He felt boxed in, trapped, despite having left the unbearable confines of Saeās apartment.
No matter how far he walked, Madrid itself seemed to cling to him with heavy, barbed fingers. As if even free from Sae, he wasnāt being allowed to truly escape from anything.
(His taste of freedom hadnāt lasted very long. A voice in his mind, playful and lilting, āOut of the frying pan and into the fire, huh, Rin-chan?ā)
It made him long for easier daysā for the gentle caress of the ocean breeze as the last rays of the dying sun sparkled across rocks and for softly stirring waves of cerulean water. For the feeling of a hand clinging to his own despite the heat of the day lingering, more desperate for continued contact than it cared for the sticky feeling of sweat.
(For Saeās wide, hopeful eyes as they gazed down at him, delighted simply by his presence. As if heād never been so happy with anything else in his life. As if he thought the two of them truly could become the worldās best strikers.)
Beside him, a woman passed, blissfully unaware, hand entwined with a little boy who couldn't have been any older than 10.
And the boy clung to a child even smaller than himself.
āStay near me.ā The woman said, sternly, as she paved a way for her and the boys.
āI will mama,ā The elder said, in that high, optimistic, childish tone that would one day be forever lost. His hand tightened minutely around the smaller boyās.
The woman glanced down at them both, āAnd make sure your brother stays with you. Donāt let him go.ā
At that, the little boy gave her a wide, gap-toothed smile that was near-blinding in the midday sun, āI wonāt mama.ā
And the boy turned to his brother, āYou heard mama, Iām in charge today!ā He practically vibrated at this declaration.
As if taking care of his younger brother was the greatest honor in the world.
And the younger boy blinked with wide, light-filled eyes, and said, āNo fair!ā But his tone was bright, and he barely seemed to care at all.
Andā
Rin had to get out of this city.
ā¦
Ā
As the train pulled away from the station all Rin could think of was how much it sounded like the rushing of waves agitated by a storm.
The very notion threatened to sweep him off his feet and pull him under.
Rin could only blink at the trainās departure and movement of the crowd around him. The tide ebbedā men and women alike stepped off the train, onto the stationās platform, and began to walk confidently like there wasnāt any doubt in the world. The tide flowedā a new crowd flooded the station, checking watches in varying states of boredom as they waited for the next train.
He stood like some awkward rock in the midst of it all, jagged and dark and oddly out of place. The tide flowed around him, unbothered if a bit miffed at his placement.
The world, afterall, kept flowing, and it seemed that all Itoshis could ever do was stay at a standstill.
Rin felt sick.
A sound like rushing water filled his ears. He looked for a train, but nothing was on the tracks. The crowd remained relaxed and waiting.
He forced his legs to move.
Rin was halfway out of the train station when he realized he had absolutely no idea where he was going.
Like clockwork, he came to a standstill again. As an Itoshi, it was inevitable, wasnāt it? To be stuck in the same way he always was?
The crowd flowed around him, rushing like water around a rock.
His fingers trembled as he reached for his phone.
God, he was hopeless.
Isagiās contact stared at him with large, seemingly innocent eyes. But Rin knew better. Knew enough that even the profile picture made him itch to dig his nails into something, to sink his teeth into flesh and feel it burn. Isagi always managed to look kind until the moment his cleats stepped into the boundaries of the pitch.
And at that moment, it seemed for all the world that phone-Isagi was judging him.
āJust try to keep up, genius.ā
Rin gritted his teeth, just barely able to stop himself from screaming āI AM TRYING!ā and throwing his phone as far away as possible.
Yeah, on second thought, he wasnāt going to ask Isagi for any help.
He could just imagine the grating messages that would flood his phone: āRin! A āhelloā wouldāve been nice. How's Sae been? Everyoneās been asking how you guys are doing.ā
Rin shuddered at the very thought.
He pocketed his phone and began to wade through the crowd once again.
Heād find what he was looking for one way or another.
(Itoshis, afterall, excel at being stubborn.)
ā¦
Ā
Rin wasnāt so certain, anymore, when the sight of FC Barchaās training center looming on the horizon finally met him.
As he stepped out of the taxi, he felt a lot like heād been plunged into another dimension.
(Off the cliff, hitting the water and sinking down, down, down into the oceanās gaping maw. The roaring of raging waves against the cliffās face muffled with each passing moment until no sound remained. The rays of the sun, unable to permeate the ebony of such darkness, such calm. Too deep, now, to feel much more than cold and the unforgiving pressure of all the waters above. To see much more than infinite black.)
The sky had sunk into a deep navy, stars twinkling dully while the city shone with all its brilliance. He could've sworn it had been bright out mere hours ago.
Am I really doing this?
Uncertainty weighed down on him as he grew closer to the training facilities.
But where else was he going to go? To whom would he turn?
Shidou was his friend, yes, but Shidou was always, at his core, Saeās. That was something that Rin knew deeply, something that he knew even though Shidou denied it.
From the time Shidou had first seen Sae, Rin had lost a piece of his friend (and at that time, enemy) to his older brother.
(It seemed like Rin was always losing something to Sae. His dream. His happiness. His empathy. His freedom. His mind, even.)
Shidou was irrevocably obsessed with Sae, with soccer, giving all and more of himself into everything that caught his eye. As the wild striker might put it himself, he was always committing himself wholeheartedly into anything that ātickled his fancyā.
He was always putting himself in Saeās path, even if he didnāt mean to.
Shidou took wide strides forward and never glanced back, always plowing forward towards his dreams savagely, following his instincts wildly and being free in an animal kind of way.
A little bug being drawn instinctively to the light of Saeās talent despite himself.
Because that was what it meant to be Shidou Ryusei.
But Bachiraā
Bachira was different.
Heād known Rin first in a way Shidou never had.
Shidou and Rin had been enemies long before theyād been friends, and Shidou had known Sae long before even that.
Bachira had only ever known Itoshi as Rin.
To him, Itoshi meant Rin and Rin meant Itoshi in a way it never had to most anyone else.
It seemed stupid butā Rin had been hit with more than his fair share of phrases along the lines of āItoshi? Like Sae Itoshi Itoshi??ā or nicknames such as āLittle Itoshiā that clearly defined him as second to his brother.
He had always been the lesser, the younger, the weaker.
But in Blue Lock, heād had the chance to be the better, the stronger, the only Itoshi that those boys truly knew. Of course, theyād heard of his brother, but they were so daunted by Rinās own strength that there was no time to compare him to the midfielder.
For once, heād been at the top of the food chain and strikers cowered at his feet like prey animals, noses twitching at the scent of danger, chests heaving from fear.
(Like heād cowered at Saeās feet all those years before, his blood turning to ice in his veins as his brotherās words dug their teeth into his neck for the kill.)
It was a sick, divine pleasure.
Rin wouldnāt have traded it for the world, no matter how twisted that made him.
That macabre euphoria of crushing other strikers, of fighting to the death on the battlefield of a soccer pitch, was the one thing Sae had never been able to take from him.
And heād tried, almost desperately. Sae had thought Rin couldnāt see the looks of concern or outright fear that had crossed his faceā but he had.
He knew that he was a monster.
It was what made him so ruthlessly powerful as a striker.
And when heād seen Isagi play, when heād seen Shidou play, when heād seen Bachira playā
Monster recognizes monster.
And so Rin had recognized Bachira.
(Of course, heād seen Isagiās potential, too, but enough about Isagi. That incessantly joyful bastard pissed Rin the fuck off. And Shidou didnāt need another thing to add to his list of āTop 10 reasons why Rin would be my perfect brother-in-lawā.)
Maybe that was why Rin was drawn to him now, at his lowest point, sinking beneath even the rocky bottom of the cliff and into the oceanās deepest, darkest depths.
Bachiraās eyes had already seen through him before.
(The darkness of night pooling above his head, nothing but the sound of his own breath in his ears. A ball beneath his feet. A flash of yellow at his heels, jeering that he wasnāt going to be able to score. A leg snaking through his own, flicking the ball away as Bachira snarked, āNot so fast, Rin-chan~ā in that musical way of his. A feeling that maybe he and Sae would never get along, but at least he could stand to play soccer forever with someone.)
Rin breathed in the ebony air of the night into his lungsā felt it settle like tarā and breathed it out again with tremendous effort.
FC Barchaās training center was now looming closer than everā lit eerily by lamplight like one of those haunted houses from a horror movieā and he took each step towards it, even though it felt a little like drowning.
When Rin finally reached the doors, he paused. The training facility loomed above him, waiting. The whole world seemed to take a breath for a momentā as if it sensed that this was significant. As if it sensed that opening these doors would push him into unknown waters that he couldnāt return from.
He ground his teeth together, felt the bones grate together horribly, his jaw muscles aching.
There was an odd sense of finality in the air as his fingers ghosted the handle of the door, the metal feeling like ice against his skin.
If he turned back right nowā if he started walking back to the train station, if he went back to Madridā he might be able to pretend that none of this was happening. That he hadnāt fought with Sae, and that he wasnāt stuck in his brotherās shitty apartment, out for the rest of the season.
(As if that wasnāt the biggest lie of the centuryā heād never be able to forget that fight. Saeās words, Saeās face, his own emotions, the bland colors of the apartment, would always come back to him. Moments like thatā charged with electric emotion, with anger, with fear, with painā had always latched onto him like leeches. Never letting go, always draining him. Burning like fire and not leaving even with the sharpest tug. It was a curse, and one that left him forever with the sight of falling snow, the feeling of frostbite nipping at his fingers, and the twisted parody of his brotherās faceā that inhuman thing that had come crawling back from Spain.)
Rin shook his head.
He knew better.
His brotherā his real brother, not the stranger that returned from Spain, nor the stranger heād been taking care of for so many monthsā was never going to return.
So Rin had decided to leaveā he would not suffer the shame of crawling back. Not this time. Not again. Never again.
Because he was never going to find what he was looking for.
Or rather, who he was looking for.
And that fight, that decision, had been final in a way nothing had been for a long time.
His fingers tightened around the handle of the door, and pulled.
The resulting clang of metal on metal shuddered through the clearing and he flinched back. Hard. His heart jack-rabbited in his chest, and he whipped his head around to squint at the darkness, praying that nobody had heard thatā and especially that they hadnāt seen that.
Okayā¦
So maybe he hadnāt thought about what his so-called āplanā had entailed.
The door was, of course, locked.
Why wouldnāt it have been?
āYou fucking idiot!ā Rin hissed, feeling his chest tighten as he desperately resisted the urge to do something even more embarrassing like ripping all his hair out.
Even so, his hands drifted up to his head, tugging at the limp strands like maybe they were the lifelines that could drag him out of his state of submersion.
The locked door seemed to mock him: Now what?
He honestly didnāt know.
Again, he felt a rush of frustration, of course the place was locked.
Why wouldnāt it have been?
But heād honestly not been doing a lot of logical thinking in the past few hoursā or maybe the past day, it was getting so dark he wasnāt sureā and he didnāt even know where Bachira lived.
So, naturally, heād come to Barchaās training facility, but of course he had forgotten that professional soccer clubs didnāt just let anyone waltz into their buildings.
God, he was a mess.
Maybe he should've just sucked it up and stayed with Sae.
Maybe he was overreacting.
A little voice in his head that sounded a lot like Sae whispered: āAnd you think Iām not acting logically?ā
It made him so upset to even think of how lukewarm Sae would think he was acting if he knew what was going on that he almost started screaming.
Yeahā he was absolutely glad he wasnāt around Sae right now.
At least here, stuck outside Barchaās training center with a phone on questionable battery percentage, no way home, and no way inside, he was free from the midfielderās icy, suffocating gaze.
And wasnāt that sad?
Rin couldnāt recall when heād last seen Saeās eyes soften in that distinct manner of his that meant kindness, that meant compassion. A look so fleeting, so precious, and so, so rare.
Perhaps the last moment Sae had felt such emotion was before Spainā before his descent into something not-quite human and far too automatic.
He didnāt know.
Sae had been so closed off towards him for so longā long enough that recently heād almost begun to think that he had done something wrong. That Saeās words were justified and he really was disgusting enough to make someone puke.
And with Saeās injury, with the hollowness that seemed to overtake him, the lack of careā
Rin had almost felt sorry for him.
Almost.
But of course, nothing good could ever last between them. If āgoodā even began to describe the battlefield they lived in for those few months. The apartment had been a minefield, and theyād walked on it as if they hadnāt knownā or, rather, were pretending it wasnātā miraculously managing to scrape by without any casualties.
Until Sae stepped on a mine and blew everything apart.
The tension between them had shattered.
Rinās almost of an apology, his ghost of pity, had shattered with it.
Broken into so many pieces like Saeās leg, like their motherās fine china, like everything else had ever fallen apart in their life.
Into so many pieces it was beyond repair.
Rin suddenly felt very tired. The night pressed down on him like the entire weight of the ocean until it was all he could do to sit down and pray that Bachira would leave the facility and see him waiting.
ā¦
Ā
āRin!?ā
The striker in question jerked forwards from his slumped position against the wall, muscles protesting.
He blinked, felt a heavy weight on his eyes that told of restless sleep, and blinked again, slowly adjusting to the sensations of the world.
The streetlights were near blinding in the pitch-black of the night.
It made his head ache.
āHey! Earth to Rin-chan!ā A hand waved itself in front of his face, insistent, before drawing back. A sigh sounded somewhere in front of him, and then golden eyes were mere inches from his face.
āRin?ā Bachiraās eyes were wide, the question slipping out of his mouth so fast, so uncharacteristically blandā no nickname, no sing-song cadanceā that it sounded foreign, āWhat are you doing here?ā
That woke him up.
āIāā Rin took in a breath but it seemed like the air was suddenly liquid, and it caught awkwardly in his throat.
Heā
He wasnāt really sure what he was doing there. But did it even matter? Maybe it didnāt. Maybe it did. He honestly didnāt know.
Instead of speaking, Rin shrugged, swallowing back the flood of words that seemed at once eager and unwilling to burst forth from his mouthā a swirling hurricane of āI donāt knowā and āWe foughtā and āI feel like Iām drowningā and āCan I have a hug?ā and āAm I the reason he quit?ā and āDid our dream ever matter?ā
āYouāre not sure?ā Bachiraās eyes blinked, cat-like and glowing as he craned his neck awkwardly to meet Rinās gazeā his head was turned halfway to upside down, and the sight would have been funny if he hadnāt seemed so concerned. āOkay.ā
Rin felt a rush of shame pool like bile under his tongue at the lackluster tone.
Maybe it was wrongā
āHey. Itās really fine, Rin-chan.ā Bachira shook his head, then winced as if the motion at such an angle had pulled something in his neck. It probably had. He smiled awkwardly, teeth flashing in the lamplight. āYou donāt have to have a reason to visit a friend, right? And if Iām being honestā I was about to crash your place again if you didnāt visit me soon anyway, so letās just call it even.ā
Rin inhaled awkwardly to avoid letting out a strange, strangled sound at the sudden tightness in his chest, āSure.ā
Bachira smiled, his eyes squinting with the motion, joy despite all circumstances displayed brazenly across his face. As if he was announcing to all the world that no matter what, heād shine as bright as a thousand suns.
(In the dark of midnight, the deepest depths of the ocean, an anchor descending, the sweet kiss of metal stirring up ancient sand for the first time in centuries, the promise of a surface, somewhere beyond, somewhere above. Memories of the golden-crowned sun as it rose over the horizon, the ocean basking under its gaze. Warm. Bright.)
Rin blinked at the sight of the wild striker before him, feeling blinded. Feeling as if heād been lifted to the surface of the depths heād sunk into, if only briefly. Thinking that maybe this was a dream, and heād wake up to nothing but darkness again.
But then, Bachira reached out a sun-kissed hand, the tan of his skin practically glowing gold in the lamplight as if he were divine, āWell, Cāmon then, sleepyhead.ā
Untouchable, Rin thought with a reverence that had, before this time, only ever belonged to one person in his life.
He reached for the offered hand, and let himself be pulled.
ā¦
After months in Saeās apartment, entering Bachiraās home felt like drifting through a false reality.
The place was teeming with lifeā personal affects crammed on every available surface, furniture of all shades that miraculously managed to look homey and not hideous, pictures of friends and family hung up like trophies on the walls, and a tiny easel in the corner with a half-finished scene, paint splatters decorating the nearby wall, half smudged as if Bachira had tried (and failed) to remove them.
Even the air felt different. Clearer. Warmer. Lighter. Softer, somehow.
As Rin stepped further and further into Bachiraās home, he felt the waterās ever-so-steady pressure on his bones ease, settling into something more bearable.
Humming quietly, Bachira bounced ahead of him, excited despite the hour. As the striker milled around, he talked about nothing and everything at once. Soccer drills, Lavinhoās latest moves, what he ate for breakfast, and why that photo of him and Isagi on a beachā sitting innocently on a side tableā was his favorite because theyād both been knocked over by a wave seconds after.
He even laughed over the very real possibility of pulling an all-nighterā as if it wasnāt Rinās fault and was instead a fun decision they'd made together, like two giggling teenagers having a sleepover.
(Lukewarm is what Sae mightāve called it. And maybe Rin would have, once. But nowā maybe warm was all that it truly was.)
After quickly setting his stuff down, Bachira ushered Rin to sit down and choose a movie while he went to grab snacks from the kitchen. The strikerās chatter had never stopped, even as he entered and exited various rooms.
Logically, Rin knew that it was for him. Bachira was talking, filling the silence with his joy and sound in an attempt to calm him.
(And was it so wrong if that was part of the reason heād come here? To let Bachiraās voice fill the emptiness around him in a way that made him feel a little less like he was drowning?)
āBack, Rin-chan!ā Bachira chirped, plopping himself down closer to Rin than was truly necessary. He didnāt mind, though. There was a part of him that longed to be close to something real. Something warm.
When Rin didnāt inch away, Bachira smiled up at him in that cheshire way of his that said he understood.
āSoā¦ā The elder striker drew out the āoā in that easy, playful way of his, āWhatāre we watching tonight?ā
Bachiraās eyes shone like mini suns in the darkness as they fixed on Rin, waiting for a response.
One of the first things heād done while preparing for their spontaneous movie night was shut off all the lights, save a little bee-shaped nightlight (āIsagi gave that one to me for Christmas.ā) in the far corner of the room.
āTo keep the monsters awayā, Bachira had said, after Rin had stared at the ridiculous little nightlight for what must've been a second too long.
He guessed that was a valid enough response.
There was something undeniably warm about the yellowish light cast from the small light that made the darkness a little less deep. A little less damning. A little less like drowning.
āRiiiiinā¦ā A finger poking at his forehead startled him out of his thoughts.
He blinked, refocused on the sight of bright golden eyes and the feeling of the TV remote in his hand, and blinked again.
The echo of spoken words in his mind, smooth as honey, Whatāre we watching tonight?
āI donāt know,ā Rin muttered, more to himself than anyone else, āDo you think that it really matters?ā The question came out strained, muffled by the water sloshing in his lungs. He wasnāt sure if heād meant to ask about the movie, or something else.
And thatā
He knew that was a lie.
But wasnāt it easier to pretend he didnāt know?
Bachira blinked at him slowly, head tilting to the side, āI think it does.ā His words weighed heavy, sinking into the air like rocks into the oceanās depths.
Silence stretched between them.
The TV remained off.
Rinās hand was loose around the remote.
āThen why canāt I make up my mind?ā His voice trembled, pathetic even to his own ears. As soon as the words had left his mouth, he tensed, regretting them. Expecting ridicule, or some kind of backlash.
(Saeās voice in the back of his mind, āIf youāre so indecisive, you should quit soccer. Itās not a useful trait.ā)
But Bachira just let out a quiet hum, calming and warm where Sae would have been harsh and cold, āSometimes our hearts can be divided, Rin-chan. You can want two things at once, or even three, or even five hundred. It doesnāt have to make sense.ā
āBut it does. And I just donāt understand why he keeps leaving meāā Rin broke off, felt the damp, cold, endless waters lapping at his neck. His hand clenched around the remote, felt it creak under the pressure.
The feeling of cold pressed its fingers against his throat, suffocating.
(The faint buzzing of wind in his ears, the snowstorm secondary to the scene in front of him, the robotic rendition of his brother staring at him like he was revolting. Tears welling in his eyes, burning against the cold of his frostbitten cheeks, as Sae continued with his voicelines, his programmed responses. His brother was so blank, so cold, so angry. The thought that this wasnāt realā that this couldnāt be happening, not to him, not to them, not to their dream.)
āRin-chan,ā Bachiraās voice was steady as an anchor, and Rin latched onto the sound of it, āI know you love your brother, but do you hear yourself?ā His eyebrows wrinkled, and he took in a small breath, as if bracing himself for a violent response. But Rin didnāt move, barely blinked, as he tried to process the other strikerās words.
There was the sound of crinkling as Bachira set his snacks to the side before shifting even closerā if that was even possible with how little space was left between them.
āRin,ā He continued, voice soft like honey, āWhen I was a kid, nobody ever wanted to play soccer with me. Nobody wanted to play with the weird kid. It was just me and my monster, until I met Isagi and the other guys in blue lock. Until I met you.ā Bachira turned away, and Rin could feel the trembling intake of his next breath, āBut then, you two began evolving and left me behind. I didnāt know what to do. I had selfishly thought that Isagi wouldnāt be able to surpass meā that how I was playing was good enough to stay on par with you monsters.ā
A strange look crossed over the elder strikerās faceā hazy and lost in thought. As if he was remembering his story as he told it, and even now the distress of it wasnāt something he could shake.
āBachira,ā Rin interrupted, something tight and horrible strangling his throat at the thought that heād left someone behind just like Sae had left him, āYou can keep up with usāā
A hand clapped itself over his mouth, muffling his words, āAh-ah. Be nice. Iām not done talking, Rin-chan.ā Bachiraās words were playful, but there was something oddly serious about his demeanor that had Rin unconsciously obeying.
Unbothered, Bachira continued, keeping his hand over Rinās mouth like it was natural, āYou left me, and I realized something. If I wanted to catch up to youā If I wanted to play soccer my way, it couldnāt be based on the condition of having someone else. Of being beside you. I needed to have my own ego.ā He paused for a few seconds, a small frown taking over his face at Rinās complacency, āI guess what I mean is, revolving around a relationship isnāt good. Obviously that doesnāt mean you should hate Sae-san, but he isnāt your life. And youāre not his.ā
Rin felt a frown pulling at his face, brows furrowing until he felt his muscles protest, āI never said that. All I wanted was for us to follow our dream together.ā His voice trembled, dangerously close to breaking.
It felt like a current had swept his feet out from under him and tossed him out to sea just as he was beginning to see dry land.
āThatās just it, Rin.ā Bachira said, and in the darkness his eyes seemed to dim, āOur dream. But maybe that was never his dream. Maybe it was just yours.ā
Notes:
Going back to school tmrw... :((( so might take me longer to get the next two chapters out but im gonna try my best
ALSO!!
This is random but I totally believe that Saeās effort in the U-20 match wasnāt 100%. Maybe more like he was trying 40% then locked in a bit more during his āletās bring this game to the next levelā moment to 60% effort. I think after this he greatly underestimated Rinās current abilities, leading to a loss against Rinās 110% effort and Saeās 60% (Not to discredit Rinās skill or anything, bc he did surprise Sae).
I feel that weāll get to see Saeās 100% effort very soon in the manga⦠and Iām so hyped!! Now that Rin and Isagi have gotten so much better/evolved so much, maybe Sae will even fail a little! I think itāll be very interesting to see what happens. Lmk what u guys think!
Sorry for all the yap haha š
Pages Navigation
NeoGothamCity on Chapter 1 Sun 13 Apr 2025 11:34PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 12:13AM UTC
Comment Actions
BloodiedVampire on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 05:38AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 12:06PM UTC
Comment Actions
catsaresillybeings on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 01:59PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 02:00PM UTC
Comment Actions
kurapikaspookie on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 06:31PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 07:07PM UTC
Comment Actions
Leodoesntknowakane on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 10:12PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Mon 14 Apr 2025 11:59PM UTC
Comment Actions
B (Guest) on Chapter 1 Tue 15 Apr 2025 07:51AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Tue 15 Apr 2025 01:13PM UTC
Comment Actions
Shi_star on Chapter 1 Tue 15 Apr 2025 12:50PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Tue 15 Apr 2025 01:13PM UTC
Comment Actions
luminescencea on Chapter 1 Mon 09 Jun 2025 10:01PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Tue 10 Jun 2025 01:54AM UTC
Comment Actions
Miniuninamin on Chapter 1 Tue 10 Jun 2025 11:43PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 1 Wed 11 Jun 2025 12:04AM UTC
Comment Actions
NeoGothamCity on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 04:31AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:05AM UTC
Comment Actions
Shi_star on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 06:51AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:05AM UTC
Comment Actions
BloodiedVampire on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 08:24AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:06AM UTC
Comment Actions
rnskits on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 09:23AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:07AM UTC
Comment Actions
B (Guest) on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 09:29AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:08AM UTC
Comment Actions
Leodoesntknowakane on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 10:43AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 11:08AM UTC
Comment Actions
bloomb4t on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 08:11PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 10:05PM UTC
Comment Actions
bloomb4t on Chapter 2 Mon 21 Apr 2025 10:33PM UTC
Comment Actions
Jiki (Guest) on Chapter 2 Thu 24 Apr 2025 04:16PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Thu 24 Apr 2025 06:55PM UTC
Comment Actions
Desiderium_Woman on Chapter 2 Sat 26 Apr 2025 09:19PM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Sat 26 Apr 2025 10:52PM UTC
Comment Actions
Desiderium_Woman on Chapter 2 Tue 29 Apr 2025 07:01PM UTC
Comment Actions
Sonico69 on Chapter 2 Sat 17 May 2025 04:06AM UTC
Comment Actions
imsnowlost on Chapter 2 Sat 17 May 2025 01:15PM UTC
Comment Actions
Miniuninamin on Chapter 2 Wed 11 Jun 2025 12:17AM UTC
Last Edited Wed 11 Jun 2025 12:18AM UTC
Comment Actions
Pages Navigation