Happy holidays @deathdesu!

to: @deathdesu

from: @thefireinthewire

Here’s you gift! I really liked you prompt about Eric pulling Mira into nerdy hobbies, so here you go!

Ao3

Dice and Other Distractions


“So the thing is,” Eric says, running his hands through his hair as he addresses the table, “I’ve been trying to find something to keep Mira occupied since she can’t go out much anymore ever since I, uh, broke her out.” His voice tapers off, wavering at the last few words. “But then I found this article about how playing games like Dungeons and Dragons can help people work out their feelings in a, a non-violent manner.” He laughs nervously. “And I remember playing some games in high school, so I think it would be fun.”

“Okay, and?” Junpei said from across the table. Officially they were all there to work on preventing the destruction that Delta had predicted, but they had gotten off topic a while ago.

“Well, right now with me, Sean, and Mira, we don’t have enough people to play a game, so I was hoping that someone else would play with us.” Eric cast his eyes around the room. Akane and her brother, who always seemed to show up at these meetings, were speaking quietly in Japanese and seemed to have missed most of what he had been saying. Carlos was looking on with the serious concentration he always had when someone else was speaking, but he had yet to say anything. The rest were looking on with varying levels of boredom. Phi had her head nestled in her folded arms and looked to to be asleep.

“Yo, Phido,” Sigma nudged her with his elbow, “you play Dungeons and Dragons, right?”

Phi whipped her head up so fast that it turned into a white blur. “Who’s playing Dungeons and Dragons.”

“Uh, I am?”Eric raised his hand awkwardly. “I need another person so that I can play with Mira and Sean.”

“What edition are you using, sixth or fifth? Or are you using a totally different system? I’m not super fond of Fate, but I really like Blades in the Dark, and I’ve played some good games of The Sprawl, and Apocalypse World is always fun.”

“I- what?” Eric shook his head. “I don’t know what half of that means. I’ve only ever played Dungeons and Dragons, and I wanted to do a campaign for Mira.”

“Oh, okay.” She bounced up and down in her seat a little. “Do you have a campaign planned out? Because I have a couple of ideas for ones that I want to run, if you don’t already have something planned out.”

Eric shrugged. “Not really. Do you want to-? I mean, you don’t have to, it just seems like you want to.”

“Yeah, I’ll be the DM!” Phi said, a little too quickly. “Sorry, it’s just that I haven’t played a game since I graduated college and started saving the world full time.”

“I think we could all use a game like this as a break,” Diana pipes in. “I mean, I’ve never played before, but it seems like it could be fun.”

“As long as Mira can play, I guess people can join in,” Eric said. “Does anyone else want to play?”

“Sorry, I think I’m too busy,” Junpei says, turning to join Akane and Aoi in their conversation.

“I can try to see if I have time,” Carlos said, running his hand sheepishly through his hair. “I played once or twice when I was younger, but my life’s been a bit hectic since then.”

“Okay, anyone else?” Phi looked around the room, but the rest seemed uninterested. “Nope? Alright. I expect character sheets on my desk by Monday.”

“What character sheet?” Diana said at the same time as Eric said “You don’t have a desk.”

“I’ll send everybody links to stuff you can use,” Phi said, gathering up her things. “I gotta start planning.” Then she scurried out of the room too quickly for anyone to follow.

“I’m the one who drove her here,” Diana said as Phi disappeared from sight. “She can’t go home without me. I have no idea where she’s going”

*

“Hmm,” Mira said, flipping through the handbook. “So playing as certain races can give you an advantage in certain other classes. Interesting.”

“Yeah,” Eric leaned into her as she read. “Some people don’t really care about those connections, since they think that it makes characters too stereotypical, but most of them make sense to me.”

“That’s stupid of them.” Mira shook her head. “It makes perfect sense for me to play an orc fighter. An orc’s strength will give me the extra power that I need in combat.”

“Oh, really?” Eric laughed. “I thought you would have chosen something pretty, like, like an elf!”

“No, that wouldn’t work for what I want to do.” She turned to look at Sean, who was filling out his sheet sprawled across the living room floor. “What about you, Sean? What kind of character are you going to play?”

“A gnome!” He turned his head and smiled. Sigma had made him a temporary head while he worked on developing ABT, and while it was more realistic than a big sphere, there was a plastic quality to the skin that made it obvious that he wasn’t human. “They’re going to be a wizard. I’m working on making a backstory now.”

Eric shifted in his seat. “Are you sure you want to play a wizard? I’ve heard that it’s sometimes hard for beginners to play magical classes.”

“I’ve already downloaded the entire spellbook, players handbook, and several other supplementary materials to my hard drive.” Sean said. “I think that as long as we stick to the rules I should be okay.”

“Oh, right,” Eric said, “I forgot that you can do that.”

“What kind of character are you playing, Eric?” Sean chirped.

“Oh, I, uh. I got so excited about you guys making your characters that I forgot to think about mine.”

He picked up the handbook and flipped through it, although he already knew most of the basics. When he was younger he would usually play a fighter, but Mira already had that covered. He should play a character that could protect her, maybe one with healing powers, that would be nice.

“I think I’ll be a paladin.” He said, resolve hardening his voice.

“And for the race?” Mira asked.

“Human,” he said, then again with more certainty. “Human.”

*

“So, does everyone have their dice?” There was some fumbling and rattling. “Character sheets?” Papers rustled. “Wizard hats?”

“You never said-”

“It was a joke Carlos.”

“Oh. Right.”

They were crowded around the kitchen table in Eric and Mira’s house, almost elbow to elbow, excluding Phi, who was seated at the head of the table and hidden behind several propped-up binders. Mira and Eric had decided to host the gathering because it was risky for Mira to be seen in public after she had been broken out of jail, but this was more people than they were used to having over at once. Sean was sitting with his knees pulled up to his chest in an armchair that they had pulled in from the living room.

“Okay.” Phi clapped her hands together. “Let’s get this party started. First, I want everyone to introduce their characters. Eric, since all of this was your idea, you can start.”

“That’s not how that works!” Eric snipped.

“Yes it is. C’mon, you’re going to have to do it eventually.”

“Fine.” He took a deep breath. “My character is a human paladin named Alexander. He fights to protect his friends, and he isn’t afraid to die for a cause.”

“That wasn’t so hard, was it?” Phi smirked. “Okay. Mira, your turn.”

“My character is a fighter named Mab the Bloody.” Mira shrugged. “She’s an orc and she likes to punch stuff.”

“Cool. Sean?”

“My character is named Lenny Littlefoot!” Sean smiled and gestured with his character sheet. “They’re a wizard and a gnome, and they’re really excited to go on an adventure, even though they’re afraid of monsters.”

“Oh buddy am I going to use that against you.” Before Sean could respond, Phi turned again. “Diana! Your turn!”

“Oh!” Diana jumped a bit. “I’m playing an elf druid named Iris. She, uh, she likes birds? I don’t know what else to say.”

“That’s good enough. Last but not least.” Phi took a moment to pause dramatically. “Carlos!”

“I,” Carlos said, dropping his voice until it was comically low, “am playing Throckmorton, a dwarf, a rogue, and a general good-for-nothing.”

“If you establish that as your character voice, I will make you use it for the entire campaign.” Phi laughed.

“Challenge accepted,” Carlos rumbled.

“Alright.” Phi looked around the table. “Is everyone ready?”

The group nodded, expectant.

“Excellent.” She cracked her fingers louder than was necessary. “The five of you have been called to the town of Windport….”

*

“The fire giant roars as you approach, letting out a burst of flame. He knows that you’re here, and he is not happy. What do you do?”

They had been playing for what felt like years now, although in reality it was more like months, on and off as schedule conflicts delayed games. They were supposed to be saving the world, after all.

All of their hard work had come down to this. The evil king was deposed, and all that remained was the giant that he had summoned. If they won this fight, the kingdom would be free.

“I want to charge in and attack him.” Mira’s face was set, almost bored.

“Are you sure?” Phi asked. Mira nodded. “Alright then. Normally I would make you roll for initiative, but it’s pretty clear that you’re making the first move. Are you just hitting him with your sword, or-?”

“I’m just hitting him with my sword.”

“Alright then. Roll a d20 plus your strength modifier, which is,” she flipped through some papers, “five. Go ahead.”

The die clattered on the hard wood of the table, coming to rest nearly at the center. All around the table, the players leaned in to see what it said.

“Oh jeez,” Carlos winced. Diana bit her lip

“Well,” Phi said, “that’s a one. Okay, so you charge forward, sword raised high, but the thing is that your sword is just metal, and your armor is metal, and all the coins and jewelry that you’ve picked up is metal. And metal melts. The giant takes a deep breath, and you can see waves of heat rolling off of him. He rears back-”

“Wait!” Eric holds out a hand, desperate. “I want to jump in front of her and cast Shield of Faith.”

“Okay, but just so you know, if you fail, both of you are toast, and I mean that literally.” Phi sighed and ran a hand through her hair. “That’s another d20, plus your spellcasting modifier, which is four. Go for it.”

Eric rolled the die between his palms, trying to channel any bit of luck he had into the little piece of plastic. It bounced on the table and landed in front of Mira.

“It’s a 20.” A smile pulled at the corner of Mira’s lips

Phi shook her head. “There’s no way.”

“Come over here and look if you don’t believe me, but it’s true. Eric rolled a critical hit.”

“No, I believe you.” Phi took a deep breath. “So the spell radiates out from your holy symbol which, may I remind you, is a literal shield. It covers the whole part just in time to protect them from a burst of flame that sets the trees around you on fire. All of you are alive. I can’t believe that you managed to pull that off.”

“I did it!” Eric grasped Mira’s hand and grinned. “Mira, I saved you!”

“Technically you saved Mab the Bloody,” Mira smiled, “but yeah, you did. Thank you.”

“You guys know that you still have to get through the rest of the encounter, right?” Phi said.

“Yeah, but at least we got through this.” Eric squeezed Mira’s hand. “We got this far.”

Escape Room: Library

to: @choicemtn

from: @windsorgirllove

Merry Christmas! Or more specifically Merry Finals at the time I’m writing this. I really hope you enjoy!

Phi was going to die.

Well, not physically. But emotionally, probably. Academically, definitely.

She had fallen asleep on the library. Apparently this school couldn’t pay for decent security guards, cause she had been locked in. She wasn’t even tucked away in a corner; she was in one of the computer banks, out in the open. The keyboard had left painful red indents in her face. She growled, pushing herself off the hard plastic seat while rubbing at her cheek. The library was dark.

She checked her phone. 2:58. Only 12 more hours until her final term paper was due and she could finally collapse. She picked up her bag and headed for the front door.

Locked, of course. Phi knelt down, placing her bag beside her, and peered at the door latch. She could pick regular locks pretty easily – learn how to one boring summer – but she didn’t know what to do about an electronic lock. It was probably rigged to set off an alarm, too. That would be a great way to end her first semester at college, getting kicked out for breaking into the library. She fell back to a sitting position and put her chin in her hands. Maybe she could just stay there until morning. Freak out the librarians when they finally arrived.

She sighed, falling back and stretching on the floor. This was hard. College was hard. Life was hard.

It wasn’t supposed to be.

She wasn’t supposed to be stumped by a simple locked door. She wasn’t supposed to have put off an essay until the very last moment. She wasn’t supposed to be falling behind.

Phi let out a frustrated scream, kicking the ground. Then, abruptly, all her angry energy left her. Her stomach growled. She groaned and pushed herself back up. The basement was supposed to have vending machines.

Her footsteps were especially loud on the echoing steps down. She should probably be more worried about making so much noise. But it’s not like anyone would hear. That would be too lucky for her.

She punched the numbers into the machine and leaned against it, surveying the basement study area. They’re were bean bag chairs in some of the private study rooms on the top floor. Maybe she could just sleep here. That would be nice – a quiet night, for once. She couldn’t get comfortable in her own room. She was an only child. Sleeping with another person in the room was… weird.

Phi tore the wrapper off the chocolate and took a big bite of it. Food made her brain feel a little clearer. She couldn’t sleep – not yet. And she couldn’t stay here either. There were probably other exits from the library. Maybe she could climb from one of the windows. There was also the cafe – they had to have a door in the kitchen or something.

She strolled through the basement, looking around. Most of the basement was dedicated to the archives. She had spent most of her time upstairs, in the private study rooms. It’s the only chance she got to be alone. It’s what she wanted.

Alright, no. No it’s not what she wanted. That’s what she was used to. It’s what she was comfortable with but it wasn’t what she wanted. She just didn’t know what she wanted. Not this, certainly. Not college.

More specifically not locked in the library in this shitty college by herself. There wasn’t any escape route from the basement, unless she fancied digging. She tramped up the stairs, munching her chocolate bar. She just wanted to get out of here. Out of this college, out of this town. Find an apartment, get a shitty job, get a cat. Disappear from the lives of everyone she ever knew. Find some new friends.

The cafe door wasn’t locked, although she half expected it to be. She hopped the counter, wandering into the kitchen. There was one door, leading out to the terrace where students would sit during the warmer months. Phi rushed to it, jiggling the handle. Locked, of course, but locked normally, not electronically. She crouched down, glaring at the keyhole while she fiddled with her hair. Her bangs fell in her face as she removed her hairpin and bent it back. It slid into the lock, clicking as she moved it around. Before long the lock sprung open.

She stopped to pin her hair back, repositioning the flower pin in her hair. Then she grabbed her bag and slung it over her shoulders, and escaped.

There was a tall hedge of bushes surrounding the terrace and pinning her in. Phi growled and stepped up onto the brick base of the planter. She had no time or patience to try finding the easiest route. Just the shortest.

The branches tore at her hair and her skin, but she pressed on, fueled by determination and late night desperation. Eventually, gasping, she made her way to the other side. She stood panting. Fucking finally.

Phi slumped to the ground, shivering. It had been so warm this afternoon when she left for the library, but now at night the December chill finally made its appearance. She hugged her knees to her chest. All her energy from before had left her, and she felt exhausted. Phi closed her eyes. She just wanted to open her eyes and be somewhere else.

There was something strange pressing at the back of her mind. She closed her eyes tighter, willing it to go away. But it kept growing. It was like the worst migraine she had ever had times ten. She let out a groan as it kept building. Her eyes shot back open, and everything was blurry. She tried to get to her phone, call for help, or even shout, but she didn’t get a chance before she passed out.

When she woke up she was staring at a blank gray ceiling.

To: @kiichu

From: @hardcoreprince

Happy Holidays! The more I thought about Left Clone!Carlos, the longer this fic got. Hope you enjoy!

Ao3


It’s late.

Carlos should have been in bed an hour ago but a five page paper has kept him up against his will. University is already proving to be a challenge and he’s just barely started.

The house is quiet around him as he stands in the hall bathroom, eyes half lidded and toothbrush sweeping lazily across his teeth. His reflection stares blankly out at him from the mirror and he’s just awake enough to notice a new pimple on his chin. He’s running a finger over the angry red bump when the first shrill siren pierces the house.

The toothbrush falls from his lips as he starts. It leaves a line of white foam down the front of his shirt as it clatters into the sink.

He groans in annoyance as he retrieves his toothbrush. All he wants to do is go to sleep and now he has to investigate the faulty fire alarm. He’s been telling Maria to change the battery for weeks now.

The smoke hits his nose as he’s rinsing his mouth.

The smell stops him so abruptly he nearly chokes. He whips his head up and is met with his own panicked expression in the mirror.

It’s not a false alarm.

The beeping tears through his ears as he yanks the door open. The hallway is already thick with black smoke. The onset of it is so sudden and so forceful that he stumbles back a few steps. The smoke floods into his mouth and eyes. He coughs and coughs as his mouth tries to form words.

And then the screaming starts.

It’s coming from all around him. He can’t pick out the sounds. He’s dizzy. He can’t see. Suddenly his house, the house he grew up in, is alien to him. He sputters and waves a hand in front of his face, trying to clear the black clouds and the heat, but it’s too much.

And then, loud and clear, as if she were standing right next to him, Maria’s voice fills his head.

Carlos!”

He takes a step forward, into the black. “Maria!” he manages to choke out.

I’m in my room! The closet!”

Even though the air is dark and thick and he’s forgotten which way is up, Carlos is drawn like a magnet to Maria’s room. He’s on autopilot when he throws open the door. The smoke pours out thick and fast and the heat licks at his clothes.

Here are the flames.

The bed has been consumed by the fire. The posters on the wall are peeling and cracking. The dresser is a tower of red and black. He can’t imagine how it’s gotten this bad this fast.

Maria!”

His heart is painful in his ears as he hugs the wall to get past the flames and to the closet. He reaches for the knob without thinking and the metal burns his palm. But the door opens as he yanks his hand away with a shout.

There’s Maria, curled up into herself on the floor, her shirt pulled over her mouth. She looks so small there, alone and vulnerable.

She locks eyes with him and he doesn’t hesitate to scoop her up. She weighs nothing in his arms. The rest of the world blinks out as Carlos turns back to the fire creeping in around them.

The flames lap at him as he rushes from the room and back into the smoke filled hall. Maria clings to him, her arms tight around his neck and her heart beating too fast against his chest. The heat of the house is dizzying and the blackened air is suffocating him but a strange calm presses into him.

It’s this calm that forces him to run.

The hall passes by in a blur. The whole house is burning now. The roof is crumbling above him and the linoleum is melting under his feet. But he presses on until suddenly he’s outside in the cool night air and the shock nearly knocks him over. He sinks to his knees and releases Maria, who coughs and sputters and sobs.

“Mom and Dad!”

Carlos is on his feet the moment he registers those words. They’re still in the house.

He bolts for the door. Maria is screaming behind him. Sirens rip through the neighborhood.

The house folds in on itself before he can reach it.

He stares as the flames consume it. The debris falls all around him but he can’t move. He’s rooted to the spot. This can’t be happening. There’s no way the fire could have moved that fast.

Out of the corner of his eye he sees movement. He turns quick, thinking it’s his parents. Thinking they made it out alive. But standing there, illuminated by the fire, is a man in a long black robe. His hood is up, but he puts it down slowly.

The man has Carlos’ face.

His hair is longer, but he has the same eyes, the same curve of his lips. The same face he just found a new pimple on.

Something flickers into his memory, something vague and sharp that makes him recoil.

A stay board breaks off the house and smacks him across the forehead. The man’s face, his face, is burned into his mind as he passes out.

He’s ten years old.

The air around him is stale and oppressive. The heat has crept into the warehouse and the old air conditioning system is wheezing out its last breaths. The eyes of the adults don’t help.

He’s standing in the middle of the bare floor, dressed in a plain black robe. Clutched in his fist is a short but wickedly sharp blade. His pulse thrums around it.

He’s not ready.

The adults are arranged in a wide circle around him. There are seven, but the spaces between them make it seem like more. Each is wearing the full Free the Soul robes with various tassels and emblems to show their ranks. Those are what he should aspire too. Those are why he is standing here now, in the flickering light of dozens of candles.

Alright, Left,” one of the adults says. “Are you ready?”

There’s a strange sort of satisfaction in being called Left here and now. It’s his name, of course, but it is all of their names. All of his peers are also called Left. The adults are called Left. If their hoods were down, he could have seen that they all had the same face. The face he will one day grow into. But usually he is called “you” or “that one” or, sometimes, “C.”

His batch had been five babies, each labeled after a letter of the alphabet. He was C. They are not supposed to be individuals, but it can get confusing.

He nods. His hands are trembling.

One of the adults is holding something. He steps forward and pulls back the blanket covering it.

C inhales sharply.

There, under the blanket, is a human baby.

The adult steps forward and places the child at C’s feet before he rejoins the circle. C stares at the small face. His face, from long ago.

The baby is wriggling but not fussy. It stares at C and he has to look away quick. The knife burns into his palm.

This one is defective,” one of the adults says. He doesn’t look up to see which one. It doesn’t matter. They are all the same. They must be all the same for society to function.

A bad heart,” another one says. “It happens. But you know how this works, don’t you, Left?”

Only the strong survive,” the adults say as a group. The sentiment echoes off the empty walls of the warehouse.

Only the strong survive,” he echoes. The baby is still staring. He raises a chubby fist towards C.

C grips the knife tight, so he won’t drop it.

Do it quick, Left.”

Don’t hesitate. Don’t feel sorry for it. It is a mistake.”

Only the strong survive.”

He can’t breathe. He’s shaking. His heart is stuttering so fast and so loud he thinks the whole warehouse can hear it. The wheezing air conditioner fills his ears. The candlelight magnifies the shadows.

Only the strong survive.

The baby coos.

C kneels. Around him the adults are shifting in close for a better look. He pulls the knife back. He swears he can feel everyone’s breath. The heat is closing in on him like fire. The sweat is beading on his brows.

He swings the knife down and misses wildly. He lets it clatter next to the baby and shoves his face into his hands. Hot tears trickle down his face and he can’t breathe. He’s trembling and crying and his chest is burning.

Disgraceful,” one of the adults says.

A pity.”

He was never the best student.”

Having to cull one at this age…. Should we let him try again?”

He doesn’t want to hear it but he can’t block it out. He sits back, away from the baby, and curls into himself, knees pressed to his chest.

Only the strong survive.”

Only the strong survive,” the rest agree in unison.

Carlos wakes with a start. He is drenched in a cold sweat and his lungs are on fire. He coughs several times and clutches at his chest. He struggles to sit up but he’s dizzy and weak and there are tubes in his nose and he gives up. He lies there, staring at the white blank ceiling as the frantic beeping in the room calms. Even though his brain is fuzzy, he’s aware enough to know he’s in the hospital.

The memory swirls in his brain, clear as if it were yesterday. But he knows he was younger. He doesn’t know how, but he knows he was ten years old.

And there are others like that man. Others wearing his face.

But he can’t think about it right now. The only thing he can think about now is Maria.

He manages to sit up enough to find the call button on the side of his bed and presses it several times until a nurse comes in. She’s tall and impatient with her hair drawn up into a bun.

“Maria,” he sputters, his voice rough and painful. “My sister. Where?”

The nurse adjusts her glasses and clears her throat. “She is alright. I’ll allow you to see her after I run some tests.”

“And my parents?”

She looks uncomfortable and the dread in Carlos’ chest overwhelms him. He knew. He knew they hadn’t survived, but he had to be sure. Her face is all he needs.

Of course, she tells him how they didn’t make it. She tries to be sympathetic, but she’s not good at that. He lets her run the tests while he puts on a brave face. His mind is a buzzing mess, his body is exhausted and all he wants to do is see Maria. He can’t let himself grieve right now, no matter how tight his throat is and no matter how much he wants to fall back into the hospital bed and sob. He needs to be strong when he sees Maria.

Only the strong survive.

The memory haunts him.

Finally, Carlos is deemed fit enough to leave his room. He can’t walk; his body is too weak. Everything hurts, he hasn’t had a chance to catalog his injuries, but he knows they are numerous. The nurse helps him into a wheelchair and pushes him down the hall to another room, smaller than his with only one bed. The curtain is drawn around it.

The nurse wheels him close and then leaves him to it. He draws back the curtain and there’s Maria, asleep. He watches her chest rise and fall and breathes a sigh of relief. She’s alive, she’s okay.

He hates to wake her, so he takes her hand and waits. Without any distractions, the thoughts start creeping up on him almost immediately. He spends a good few minutes staring at the heart monitor, looking at the steady beat of Maria’s heart, but it isn’t long before his mind wanders and the memory slams into him.

Wake up.”

It’s a woman’s voice. He isn’t used to hearing women. Since he was born, he has been surrounded by the men with his face. The women are there, at the edges, but he rarely speaks to them. All except…

Rebecca. It’s her voice. C opens his eyes and there she is, hovering over him. He startles and shrinks back into the rough sheets. He’s been on edge since the ceremony.

It’s alright,” she whispers. “We need to leave. Get up.”

He stares at her for a second too long and she grabs him by the shoulders. “Now, boy!”

His face heats up and he nods. He slips out of bed and notices the other boys in the room aren’t stirring. He looks at Rebecca with a question in his eyes and she puts a finger to her lips.

Hurry, it won’t last long. Get your shoes.”

He doesn’t question her. He rushes to the closet and grabs a pair of shoes at random. They all share the same shoe size. Personal possessions mean nothing to them. He shoves them onto his feet and grabs his coat. For a moment he wonders if he should change, but Rebecca is already shoving him out the door.

What–?”

No questions!” she snaps. “Don’t speak.”

He shuts his mouth as she grabs him by the wrist. Out the hallway, the lights are dimmed, casting whispery shadows on the plain grey walls. Everything about the structure is industrial.

Rebecca pulls him down the hall and he’s shivering. He can’t stop thinking about the baby. The baby who is probably dead. The baby who he used to be.

There’s a bend in the hall up ahead that leads to the outside. They’re almost there when Left steps out from around the corner.

Rebecca curses under her breath.

Rebecca,” the adult says. He looks surprised.

C shivers. Left doesn’t know about their outing. Rebecca is breaking the rules.

Left,” Rebecca says, bowing her head. “Sorry, was I making too much noise?” Her grip on C’s wrist has gone tighter, a warning to keep quiet.

No.” Left still looks confused. “Where are you taking that boy?”

Rebecca sighs. “It’s the failure,” she drops her voice on the last word, but C hears. “Delta wanted me to collect him. It’s so rare for them to fail at this age. He wanted to speak with him personally before we disposed of him.”

C swallows. He thinks Rebecca is lying. She must be lying, because if that were the case, she wouldn’t have been sneaking. She would not have knocked out the other boys. But still, the lie scares him. It’s still possible. There is a good chance he will die this day.

The thought turns his stomach.

Did he?” Left looks doubtful. He looks at his wrist, as if his watch has the answers. It’s in that moment that Rebecca moves.

She lets go of C’s wrist and in the same instant, is on top of Left. She swiftly punches him in the chest with one hand and presses something to his mouth with the other. He struggles in surprise for a fraction of a second before he crumples against the wall. C stares in horror, mouth slightly open.

Is he–”

Rebecca snatches his hand and she’s dragging him away before he can say anything else.

He hurries to keep up with her fast strides. The door is in reach now. His heart is painful against his ribs and the blood is rushing in his ears. He’s still shivering.

Rebecca pushes the door open and the darkness swallows them. It takes a moment for his eyes to adjust, but he doesn’t have the time. Rebecca is already pulling him forward.

Outside is jarring. C has never been outside at night. He knows the moon exists but he has never seen the yellow orb hanging in the sky. It’s full and beautiful and bright and he could stare at it all night if Rebecca wasn’t pulling him. And the stars… the stars are shining in full force. He has never seen anything so beautiful.

The docks are fresh with the smell of the sea and rotten fish. The wood squeaks under their shoes. Everything is amplified in the dark.

Rebecca stops suddenly and C slams into her. She curses and elbows him away. “Get down!”

C throws himself to the floor as the cry rings out. “Stop right there!”

Several things happen at once. A shot rings out. Rebecca screams, and C is kicked off the docks and into the ocean.

The water is a cold shock. He goes all the way under and its a moment before he surfaces, coughing and sputtering. Luckily, he knows how to swim. Of course he knows how to swim. He has been trained to be a solider.

And he swims for his life. It’s cold and the salt is burning in his eyes and he can’t stop shaking but he swims and swims until his limbs give out and he can’t swim any longer….

“Carlos?”

He snaps out of his memory. He’s drenched with sweat. He feels as if he’s just run for miles. He takes a shuddering breath and looks down at Maria, who’s squinting up at him with concern. He exhales and realizes he’s holding her hand too tight. He relaxes his grip and covers her hand with his other hand.

“Hey, kiddo,” he says, his voice rough. He clears his throat. “How are you feeling?”

Maria blinks vaguely. “Okay I guess,” she says. She seems a little out of it. Carlos doesn’t blame her. The nurse told him that she inhaled a lot of smoke. Luckily, she didn’t sustain many injuries aside from cuts and bruises. “You were spacing out.”

“Oh.” Carlos pushes back his hair and forces a smile. “No, I’m fine, don’t worry about it.” Though he tries to appear casual, his mind is racing. He has never remembered a thing from before he was ten years old. His earliest memories are of being found on a beach, then shortly after being adopted. He was lucky.

She coughs but when Carlos leans towards her, she waves him off. When she finishes, she looks at him with surprising intensity.

“Mom and Dad?”

His heart breaks all over again. He opens his mouth but he can’t bring himself to say it. He must be making a face because Maria nods. Her lower lip is trembling and her eyes are shining.

“I… I knew it.”

He doesn’t cry. He feels like he can’t cry now. He comforts Maria until she gets too tired to keep her eyes open. Before he leaves, he promises to come back and see her as soon as he can.

It’s a few days before Carlos is cleared to leave the hospital and a week before Maria can go home. Well, not exactly home.

They lost everything in the fire. The moment Carlos is released, he starts looking for somewhere to live. He needs to make sure Maria has somewhere to go home to.

He collects the insurance money. What his parents have left them is enough rent for maybe a year if he’s really careful. It’s hard to find an apartment complex that will rent to an 18 year old with no one to co-sign for him, but he manages to find a rundown building that takes him, no questions asked.

Even though Maria protests, Carlos drops out of University. He tells her over and over not to worry about it. He insists he wasn’t good at it anyway, for her sake. But in reality it’s too expensive to even consider, even with the job at the coffee shop he’s picked up. But he knows he needs something that makes more money, so he spends all his free time filling out job applications.

Anything to make sure Maria has a normal life. Anything to distract him from the memories.

They’ve been trickling in little by little. He’ll be making a latte for a sleepy eyed salaryman when suddenly he’ll be surrounded by a sea of his own face. Most snatches are vauge. Learning to swim, running with his peers, eating in the mess hall. There’s nothing as concrete as his first memories.

And then there’s the fire.

Flames fill his dreams. He smells the smoke during his idle moments. It gets to the point where the open flame on his stove makes him nervous.

It takes Carlos a year to get his certificate in Fire Science.

It annoys him that the fire scares him so much. He hates that he’s constantly paranoid, so he takes control of it. He learns to fight it.

There is no formal graduation. He’s taken all the classes online and now he’s just done and it feels like a weight has been lifted. Maria, of course, insists on celebrating.

The two of them are at the diner a few blocks from their apartment. It’s a tiny, stereotypical American diner complete with neon lights and checkered floors. They’re tucked into a corner booth with burgers and fries.

“What’s that dog that lives at the firehouse?” Maria asks as she dips a french fry into her milkshake. “With the spots.”

Carlos smiles, but he’s a little wary. Lately he’s been noticing she’s been spacey. He hopes it’s because she’s working so hard in school.“A dalmatian.”

“Oh, yeah, duh,” Maria says brightly. “And do all a hundred and one live there?”

“Um.” He scans her expression for the joke, but she’s totally serious. “No?” He sets down his hamburger and watches her a little more closely.

If Maria notices the scrutiny, she doesn’t mention it. “That’s too bad. I wonder if they ever found homes for all those dogs?”

A bad feeling creeps into Carlos’ stomach. Suddenly he doesn’t feel so hungry anymore. “Maria, what are you talking about?”

She frowns at him. “All the dogs! There were so many. All of the little white ones with the black spots. The lady wanted to hurt them.”

“Maria,” Carlos tries to keep the panic from his voice but her name comes out too sharp. “Are you feeling okay?”

He reaches across the table for her but she pulls into herself. “I’m fine! I just want to know about the dogs!”

She’s too loud. He can feel the diners around them staring now, but he doesn’t care. He opens his mouth to tell her to calm down, but his voice drops off abruptly as she freezes in place.

Maria is unnaturally still for a moment. Her eyes roll back into her head and then her body collapses onto the seat of the booth with a soft thud.

Later, he thinks that incident might have been as terrifying as the fire.

Maria stays in the hospital for a few hours before the doctors release her. Dehydration, they suggest, but they’re not certain. Carlos orders her to drink more water and monitors her intake until she gets annoyed with him.

She’s fine for months and months until it happens again. This time Maria stays overnight. The doctors run more tests. They say maybe its a side effect from the carbon monoxide poisoning from two years ago.

In the meantime, Carlos gets a job at the fire station. He’s in training and it’s hard but he feels good about it. At least something in his life is going right.

Maria has good days and bad days. Sometimes she is her normal self and other days gets lost on the way home from school. Sometimes Carlos will walk into a room and catch her staring at a wall, totally unresponsive.

Years pass like this. Maria goes to specialist after specialist but no one has concrete answers.

Eventually, the bad days start outnumbering the good days and Maria hits her head fainting at school. This time, the hospital suggests she stays for a few days, which turns to a few weeks, and then, indefinitely. But she does well in the hospital. Carlos almost feels better with her being in the hospital, as much as she hates it. Maybe this will make her better, finally.

But it doesn’t. Maria slips further and further away until one day she’s comatose.

It’s 3am when Carlos comes home from his shift.

He can’t remember the last time he came home. He’s been picking up all the extra shifts he can, desperately trying to get extra money, desperately trying to be able to afford Maria’s treatment. The only reason he left work at all was because his boss had realized just how long he’d been on the clock for and ordered him to go home.

The keys scrape against the lock as he struggles to shove the right one in. All the coffee he’s been drinking has worn off, leaving him listless and half asleep standing up. Finally, the lock clicks and he pushes the door open. As he moves to shut it behind him, a boot wedges between the door and the frame.

Carlos stumbles back and swears in surprise as the door slips open to reveal a hooded man in a black robe. The sight knocks the breath from his lungs. It’s been years since he had the first memory, years since he’s seen any sign of the hooded figures and seeing one here, while he’s so sleep deprived, throws him.

It’s been long enough for him to dismiss it all as an illusion, a side effect from inhaling so much smoke. But here and now, as this man lowers his hood, Carlos knows its all true.

The man is older than he is. His face is lined and his hair is graying, but it’s unmistakably his own face staring out at him.

“What are you doing here?” Carlos straightens himself up, adopts a defensive posture. This version of himself looks leaner, less muscled. Carlos has the advantage.

“You’re needed now.”

His voice chills Carlos from the inside out. It sounds like his answering machine recording, the sound of his voice from another source.

“Wha–”

The man closes the door behind him and the click startles Carlos.

“You need money for your ‘sister’, do you not?”

The way he says the word ‘sister’ is a curse that makes Carlos narrow his eyes. How does this man know so much about him? Have they been watching all this time?

They’ve been real all this time.

“Yes,” Carlos says, cautiously. “Have you–”

“Of course.” The man waves him off impatiently. “Did you really think we had just forgotten about you the way you’ve forgotten about us?”

A shiver goes through Carlos. He swallows. “How–”

The man (Left, Carlos know his name to be Left) clears his throat loudly. “Please, your questions are pointless. We can get you the money you need. All you have to do is follow our instructions exactly.”

“My parents,” Carlos says, his voice low. He will not be interrupted this time. “It was you who set the fire. You’re the whole reason Maria is sick.”

“Not me personally.” Left doesn’t even look ruffled. “But that was us, yes. All of this has been for a reason, Left. And now the reason is unfolding.”

“Don’t call me that!” Carlos is breathing too hard now. The anxiety is racing through his body, making him feel trapped in his own skin. “Why should I trust you?! You killed them! You… You wanted me to to kill for you! A baby!”

Left is looking at him with a mixture of pity and disgust. He doesn’t flinch as Carlos draws nearer, a wall of hostility. “Yes,” he drawls. “Again. It was not me personally. I am merely the messenger.”

It only makes Carlos angrier that this man isn’t reacting. That he has no remorse, not an ounce of care for the pain he has caused Carlos. He wants to punch Left, but it wouldn’t bring him any pleasure.

Finally, he exhales. He thinks of Maria lying in the hospital bed, he thinks about how exhausted he is, how he hasn’t slept properly in God knows how long, how he can’t keep going like this.

But mostly he thinks about Maria.

“Alright. I’m listening.”

Before he goes to Nevada, Carlos visits Maria in the hospital.

She’s been in a coma for almost a year and he can’t remember the last conversation he had with her. He wishes he could say he did, but it was probably something innocuous and she was probably only half conscious at the time. It hurts him to think of those days when she was so far away from him. And now, lying here, she’s further than she’s ever been.

Leaving her now feels final. He doesn’t know what to expect in what he’s signed up for and, frankly, he’s expecting to not make it back. Anything that Free the Soul wants him to do must be a trap, but as long as Maria gets the money she needs, Carlos is willing to walk right into it.

The room is as blank and white as ever as Carlos takes his seat. He’s given up on trying to brighten the room. It only depresses him.

He takes Maria’s hand and watches her gaunt face, the rise and fall of her chest. And then he starts talking.

He tells her everything, about his past, about how Free the Soul is sending him to Nevada to participate in some experiment. It feels good to tell her when she’s like this, when she’s not awake to worry about it. When it’s all over and he has to leave, he kisses her forehead and promises her she’ll wake up soon.

When he leaves, he doesn’t want to look back, doesn’t want to carry that image of her, alone with him to Nevada, but he does look and it breaks his heart.

DCOM is worse than Carlos could have ever imagined. The whole ordeal simultaneously takes months and mere hours. Death and despair plays out over and over until, somehow, it ends with him standing in the desert, pointing a gun at a man he thinks he half remembers.

“It was always meant to be your choice, Left.”

The name courses through him like an electric shock. Suddenly Carlos remembers where he knows this man from. A memory surges to the front of his mind, so powerful that he can’t push it back. It’s been years since this has happened to him.

You’ll do great things one day, Left.” They’re in an office. Delta is sitting at the desk, swathed in shadow.

Carlos shakes it off, focuses on the cold metal in his hands. All around him, he can feel the group’s eyes. The eight people he’s been through hell with.

“I trust you, my brother. I trust you to use your best judgment.” Delta spreads his arms wide. His expression is unreadable.

One day, you will decide my fate.”

The heat is oppressive. Carlos remembers the warehouse. He’s three places at once. The desert, the warehouse, Delta’s office.

“Only the strong survive.”

His hands are shaking around the gun. He tries to think about the pros and cons but he’s sweating and shivering so badly. All eyes are on him. He’s in the warehouse. It isn’t Delta in front of him, it’s a child. It’s a baby, small and defenseless. A living thing.

This is different. This is someone who hurt them over and over. Someone who hurt Carlos as child. Someone who killed children without remorse.

Still, Carlos lowers the gun.

Behind him, the sharp inhales from the others. There’s a small hand on his back and he doesn’t have to turn around to know it’s Akane.

“You’re right, only the strong survive,” Carlos says, turning his back on Delta. He looks out the others standing before him. Akane, Junpei, Sigma, Diana, Phi, Eric, Mira, Sean…

“And that’s us.”

Life after that is completely different. Junpei and Akane help Maria out of her coma and suddenly Carlos has his sister back.

“I remember what you told me,” Maria says one day after she’s finally left the hospital. She’s curled up on his couch, a cup of hot chocolate in her hands. She had been watching TV but now her eyes shift to him. “In the hospital.”

Carlos frowns as he looks up from his phone. “What?”

Maria sets down her mug and looks to Carlos with the ghost of a smile. “About your past. I didn’t understand it at first, but now, being with you, I… I started picking it up. Through, you know.” She motions to her forehead and waggles her finger between them. “I think I get it.”

Carlos swallows. “I didn’t want to tell you. I thought it would be too much.”

She frowns and punches him in the shoulder lightly. “Hey, what did I say about doing that? I know you love acting like everything’s fine, but I can tell when it’s not.”

Despite himself, Carlos smiles. “Watch it.” He rubs the spot where she hit him. “I didn’t… I just wanted to forget about it.”

“But you can’t.” Maria taps her forehead. “You forget I’m really good at doing this now.”

It’s true, ever since Maria has learned to control her powers, she’s been unusually perceptive to his moods. He supposes he should feel violated in some way, but he knows she’s not doing it to be malicious.

“You don’t let me forget,” he teases. He looks away from her for a moment and sighs. “But you’re right. I can’t forget. I’m… Well, I’m one of them. They raised me and put all of that stuff in my head. I’m just… I’m afraid I’m gonna just snap one day or something, you know?”

Maria puts a hand on his shoulder. “You’re not one of them. If you were one of them you wouldn’t have gotten away.”

“That wasn’t even my choice.” Now that they’re talking, Carlos can’t stop. “They were gonna kill me, and that woman saved me.”

She goes quiet for a moment, as if she’s thinking. “But you had to kill someone and you couldn’t.” She screws up her face and Carlos can feel her energy buzzing around him. “Oh God, it was a baby.”

“Don’t do that,” Carlos says, suddenly feeling sharp and edgy. He doesn’t want her to see that. She doesn’t need to.

“Sorry…” Maria tucks some dark hair behind her ear and looks sheepish. “But that was your decision not to kill.”

Carlos appreciates the thought but he shakes his head. “No, that was my weakness. I was scared, I wasn’t concerned about doing the right thing…”

“What about in the desert?”

This, he’s told her about. He couldn’t not tell her about that. But he hasn’t told her his feelings about it. His recounting of the game had been pretty brief and spared her most of the horrors.

His hands curl into fists. He can feel the metal burning in his palms. “I don’t… I don’t know if that was me either. Delta was the Leader of Free the Soul. What if it’s in my DNA that I can’t kill him? What if he’s out there, making more clones and killing the weak ones…?”

“Carlos…” Maria squeezes his shoulder. “This is why you gotta tell me things.”

Carlos snorts and takes her hand.

“Listen. The reason you didn’t kill Delta or that baby is because you’re a good person. Not because you’re weak or your DNA is messed up, or whatever else you think is wrong with you. Nothing is wrong with you.”

Something catches in his chest and he has to swallow it back. Maria is watching him intently but he doesn’t feel her energy probing at him.

“You’re my brother and not anyone else’s okay?”

“Yeah…, okay.”

Maria hugs him and he holds her for a few moments too long as he composes himself. When they pull apart, Maria’s still looking at him with concern.

“You’re not satisfied, but I’m saying that because of your face and not because I’m invading your privacy.”

“Sure,” Carlos says lightly.

“I swear!” Maria rubs the back her neck as she stares off into space for a moment. “What if we stop them?”

“What?”

“Free the Soul. I know they’re not a world ending threat or anything, but they’re still not good, right? You’ve got important friends now, friends that can help.”

“I guess.” Carlos considers this and feels a little stupid for not thinking of it earlier. He’s been so wrapped up in Maria’s recovery and getting updates from Akane about her investigation of the terrorist that he hasn’t even thought about doing something about Free the Soul.

“And you’ve got me. You know I’ll help.”

His first instinct is to tell her no, to keep her as far away as he can from even the slightest bit of danger, but when she looks at him, her eyes are fire and her mouth is set.

“I know you will.”

“Are you sure there’s no one in there?” Carlos says into his phone.

“Positive.” Junpei’s annoyed on the other end. “You have five minutes.”

The line goes dead and Carlos lets his hand drop away from his face. The night air bites at his skin and the salt of the ocean burns his eyes.

He’s back here at the docks, where it all started.

A hand fits into his. “Are you ready?”

At first he had objected to Maria coming with him. Sure, she helped him do the research but this is different. He didn’t want her anywhere near any potential danger. But, somehow, she had talked him into it. She had convinced him it was low risk and that she could handle it.

They’re standing outside the warehouse, the one from the memories he has to live with now. The one where he spent his first ten years learning to be just the same as everyone else. Now he’s here with his sister and a pocket full of matches.

Junpei and Akane have assured him Free the Soul have left this warehouse. After the game, after they let Delta live, the whole cult just vanished. They left everything behind. Beds unmade, food left in the refrigerator, labs still full of Left’s DNA.

It feels too good to be true, it feels like a trap, but Carlos has a good feeling about it. Somehow, he thinks this is Delta’s thanks for letting him live. Of course, he doesn’t let himself think this is the end. He still needs to keep tabs on Free the Soul, but this feels good, it feels like a start.

Maria squeezes his hand before letting go. He nods at her as he dips a hand into his pocket. Everything’s set. There’s a line of gasoline leading right up to the point where they’re standing. The wood of the docks will go first, so they can’t hesitate once it’s alight.

“It’s okay,” Maria says quietly. “I’m right here.”

It’s still odd that she’s comforting him, when he’s so used to it being the other way around, but he appreciates it all the same. His hands are trembling as he removes a match from the box and holds it between his fingers.

He strikes the match against the box and the flame springs to life. He stares into it for a moment, remembering the fire that took his parents, the candles during his ceremony, even the heat of the Nevada desert. All of it, burning in his hands, under his control.

Finally, he looks to Maria. “Ready to run?”

Maria smiles at him. “Yeah.”

Carlos drops the match and takes Maria’s hand in the same instant. He doesn’t stop to watch the gas ignite. The warmth blossoms behind them as they pelt into the night. Maria’s laughing and whooping and Carlos feels so light that he joins her. They don’t stop running until they get to the waiting car. Akane’s behind the driver’s seat and Junpei’s waving them in from the passenger side window.

Carlos slides into the back seat, pulling Maria behind him. She barely has a chance to close the door before the car peels off.

No one says anything as they speed away from the blaze. Carlos doesn’t look back, he doesn’t have to. He knows behind him he will find a swirl of red and orange heat, the literal ashes of his old life. A life that was never his.

Maria leans against him and he ruffles her hair. This is his life, here with his sister and his friends. He was never left. He was always Carlos. 

BIGFOOT MUSEUM 10 MI

To: @satelliteinasupernova

From: @specialagentartemis

Happy holidays!  I love writing about the Kurashiki siblings… they’re good kids and they deserve to be happy and alive every once in a while.

Ao3


The jeep tore up the red-rock scrub as they barrelled across the Mojave.  (It wasn’t really the Mojave Desert, Akane had informed him, before they’d flown out here; Building Q was farther north, nearer to… well, nearer to nothing, really, that was the point; there was nothing but bare rock and scruffy shrubs for miles and miles.)

Aoi, behind the wheel of their mostly legally acquired ATV, had decided to leave the road an hour ago.  “They’ll be fumbling their way out of the building any minute now,” he’d said.  “Would be kinda fucked if they caught up with us at this point.”

“Mmhm!” Akane said, brightly, not really listening to him.  She was riding in the passenger seat with the window rolled all the way down, her head tilted back, eyes closed, the wind from their solid 130 kph down the empty desert road whipping her hair around her face.

Even now, Aoi couldn’t help checking Akane with sidelong glances every few seconds, to reassure himself that she was real, that this was finally really happening.   They’d been working towards this day for nine years, but for Aoi, it had only ever been Akane’s insistence, Akane’s plans, Akane’s memories of the future he’d relied on; and she was always right, but.  It had still felt fake, on some level, still felt like Akane was chasing ghosts, and he had no choice but to trust the things that only she could see.

But it was real, and what’s more, they’d pulled it off with barely a single hitch, and if that wasn’t something like a miracle, Aoi didn’t know what was.

(Well.  Akane had told him that was how it would work – “How it has to,” she’d said, months ago, poring over a dense quantum physics journal late at night at the kitchen table of the unobtrusive apartment outside of Tokyo they’d been staying in that year.  “The failstates will collapse – paradoxes at that level will be unsustainable.  There will be… there will be a lot of timelines where we fail.  But they won’t matter, because the one where we survive will be the one where we succeed.  We won’t even have to remember the failures.”  You will, though, Aoi wanted to say, but she looked so… not even tired, though she was, but intense, serious and sharp and driven past any personal regard for health or comfort, that he didn’t want to dredge up an argument.  So he’d just said, “Lucky us, then, huh,” and got a bag of chips from the cabinet above the sink because he needed some excuse to stay in the room but let Akane continue her meticulous research.)

Dark apartments and brain-melting physics papers felt a world away now, though.  And that Akane was, too, which was the strangest part.  She was staring out the window, eyes bright, hair still whipping in her face but she didn’t mind, even though normally she kept it so carefully pulled back.  The car crashed over a low ridge and an animal like a deer startled at the movement.  It pranced away, almost snootily; and Akane laughed, delighted, her face lit up in the joy of moving fast and being in the sunshine and being alive, in a way Aoi hadn’t seen in her since… well, since she was twelve.


Twilight was falling as they rumbled through Oregon.  They’d left the desert behind for grasses, and then trees, and then temperate rainforests; people were still sparse, here, and they took pains to keep it that way, but the foliage was thick.  The setting sun cast the early autumn trees in a nearly golden glow; summer wasn’t over yet, here, and even at sunset the air was warm and the treetops warbled with birdsong.

Akane closed her eyes and let herself breathe it all in. The smell of pines, the end-of-summer flowers, fresh air, warm sunlight, the sound of the breeze in the needles and the feel of it on her skin.  Nine years of being a paradox, partially dead, a constant reminder of fire in the back of her brain and a tingle in her nerves when she felt time split – she’d forgotten what it felt like to be alive.  The world seemed brighter, the colors more vibrant, the air swirling with smells she’d either forgotten or been too busy (too focused, too distracted, too traumatized) to notice.

Alive, and untethered to weird twists of fate anymore.  It felt good to have the last slice of personal autonomy for her future back.  She’d missed that, more than anything.

“Think we should stop?” Aoi asked.  “How far is it left to the border?”

Akane checked her phone.  “Another five hundred miles.  Nine hours left to drive.”

Aoi let out a frustrated sigh through his teeth.  ”Fuck.  Why is America so big?

“Aliens,” Akane said.

“Thanks.”

“We might as well stop to get something to eat, at least,” Akane said.  “There’s no point in driving all the way through tonight.  Junpei and Light and Clover and the others will have been found by someone, by now.  And whatever explanation they give, it’ll take a while to untangle the truth.  No one should be after us yet, I don’t think, and no one knows where we’re going.”  She rested her chin on her elbow, pensive now, and watched the shadows from the trees streak by.  “They all have their passports, but the moment they try to leave – if they haven’t gone to the police already – it will be obvious they’re not in the country legally.  That won’t be very good for any of them.”

“Unless you wanted to leave a signed confession in the glove compartment with them, I don’t know what else we’d do.”  The road was twisting and turning through thick trees now, and Aoi had to pay most of his attention to it.

“Mm.”  Akane sat back up and turned her attention to her phone.  The headiness of being alive and free again was starting to have to take a backseat to the new set of concerns that faced them.  “I wish there’d been more time to set up a stronger Crash Keys base in America –” Though that would have meant more years of waiting around, half-dead, beholden, planning but unable to effect those plans, aware of the timelines passing and branching but unable to do anything about it, and now that I’m free of it I know I would hate having to bear that for another minute –  “but can we use what we have to move those six through the process of getting back home more easily?  I’m not sure we have any operatives in positions that would help much, but I don’t want to leave them stranded here.  Maybe we could – wait.  Nii-chan.  Nii-chan.  Look at that.

Aoi turned his head.  “What – ?” and then saw what Akane was looking at.  “You can’t be serious.”

They were moving slowly enough down this twisty road to both clearly read the brown sign standing almost desperately on the side:  BIGFOOT MUSEUM 10 MI.

Akane pulled a dramatically sad face.  “Oh, nii-chan, I’ve been to America so many times, and I haven’t even seen Bigfoot once.  You won’t deny me this chance, would you?”

“Do you actually want to go see it?” Aoi asked.  “Admit it, Akane, it looks like the fakest thing in the world.  You’ll be the most supernatural thing there.”

She punched him lightly on the shoulder.  “That’s part of the fun.  Besides, how can you know it’s fake until you see all the evidence, huh?”

Aoi rolled his eyes, but couldn’t help but grin, just a little bit.  “Well, maybe they’ll have Bigfoot burgers or something.  Make the stop worthwhile.”

“That’s the spirit!”

The Bigfoot Museum was, in fact, the fakest thing Aoi had ever seen.  It was the central attraction on the “main street” of a small town that was mostly woods, and it had a fifteen-foot-tall fiberglass statue of a hairy ape-man right outside the door so no one could possibly miss it.  A mock-log cabin on the outside, what looked like a renovated office inside, and practically half gift shop, it was about as kitschy as he expected.

(Akane loved it as much as he’d expected, though, so he could hardly begrudge it too much.)

For ten dollars each, a single tour guide in a knockoff park ranger’s hat led them through the few rooms, telling tales of drama and danger, and breathless escapes from strange beasts in the woods.  Here were photos from a logging camp in 1911, she said, gesturing at grainy sepia things blown up to poster size on the wall!  And the men who took these pictures – they swore to the end of their days that their saws and drills were destroyed by a shaggy, lumpy man-beast who roared at them to leave his woods!  (“Since when can Bigfoot talk?” Aoi asked Akane, and Akane nodded sagely.  “There must be many varieties of Bigfoot roaming the forests of Cascadia.  Several species in the same genus, you know.”  “Naturally.”)

The tour guide, a mid-twenties woman with a plastic nametag (Sophia, apparently), was way too into this.  Here, in a glass case on a pedestal, was a fragment of hair shot off Bigfoot by a hunter in 1972!  See low thick and lustrous it is; scientists were not able to identify it as a bear, or a moose, or a wolf, or anything else!  Or here – a life-size diorama of a Pacific Northwest scene, with Bigfoot front and center, and an awed and cowering logging crew running away!  Or here – press a button to listen to the firsthand accounts of some of these brave wilderness explorers who saw Bigfoot with their own eyes!  (Or here, some serious information about the Cascadia bioregion, local species, the diverse but fragile ecosystem, and how YOU can help support conservation efforts and protect local wildlife!  Including Bigfoot!)

Akane took it all in with the gravitas of a visiting professor conversing with another expert in her field.  She asked questions – “How often has Bigfoot been known to talk to people?”  “Has anyone posited a cladistic relationship between Bigfoot and the Tibetan Yeti?”  “Where were these clawmarks found?  They look so deep!”  They weren’t gotcha type questions, and they weren’t mean-spirited.  Sophia seemed thrilled to answer them.  Akane was having fun, allowing herself to have fun, and, well, this was the weird shit she’d always liked.

“Have you ever seen Bigfoot?” Akane asked her.  “Is he around here?”

“I wish,” Sophia said.  “And, honestly, who even knows if he’s real?”

“What?” Aoi said.  “Seriously?  You’ve been giving us the grand tour and you don’t even believe in Bigfoot?”

“I don’t not believe in Bigfoot,” Sophia said, sounding almost hurt.  “But that’s part of the fun.  The mystery.  If everyone knew for a fact that Bigfoot was real, this museum would be kinda boring.  You don’t see many brown bear museums, you know?  You have to have <i>something</i> out there to look for, or else what’s the point?“

That… okay.  Whatever.  Aoi shrugged, but Akane looked thoughtful, and then asked how many visitors who came through claimed to have seen Bigfoot.

There was an associated cafe around the back, and they did sell Bigfoot Burgers.

“Fucking morphogentic fields,” Aoi said, through bites of extremely mediocre and very greasy meat and cheese and bread.

Akane twirled a Bigfoot keychain around her finger idly.  She’d bought it at the gift shop, because, in her own words, “Why not?”

Night had fallen, now, and the Bigfoot Museum was closing at eight.  Akane was staring off into the woods only a dozen meters away, that swallowed the yellow light from the museum and the streetlights in pitch darkness.

“Looking for Bigfoot?” Aoi asked.

“Just thinking,” Akane said. Then, after a pause, “Is this what being alive feels like?”

“Donno,” Aoi said.  “You tell me.”

“It’s definitely different.”  She wasn’t sure how to explain it.   But it was different, from how she’d been the past nine years.  Like something had lifted, and she could see more clearly.  And could feel more clearly the creeping dread of the something she’d been trying to figure out for the past nine years, something she’d gotten jumbled flashes of that day in the incinerator, something that this time around, more pieces fell into place.  They were still elusive, still jumbled, but the feeling was clear.  Emotions passed over the fields more easily than information, Akane had found, through her reading, and her own experimentation.  She could pull information now, of course, pull memories from other timelines and other lives as easily as she could from her own past, but there was something else lurking in her mind she couldn’t quite catch all the information for.  But it was big, and it was coming soon, and she had a few threads of leads that she knew they would have to start following as soon as possible.  (A face crystallized in her mind, this time around, a name: Sigma Klim.  She would absolutely be following up on this.)

Aoi looked over at her, strangely.  Did he know?  Probably not; he had never accessed the future, the way she had.  But she was sure he knew, as well as she did, that there was still a lot of trial and hardship ahead of them.  They couldn’t have built the Crash Keys the way they did without being able to impress on them that they wouldn’t just be saving Akane’s life, they would be saving the world.

But that’s not just yet.  She’s finally free.  They can spare one day to be carefree.

She smiled.  “I’ve missed this.”

He smiled back, hesitantly.  Then, “We should probably get going.  The six of them will definitely have run into someone who’s realized that they shouldn’t be here.”

“That’s true,” Akane said.  She stood up and stretched.  “We won’t make it to Canada tonight.  Ikeda knows to have the jet there tomorrow, in any case.  We can drive until we find a motel, or a campsite.  Sleep in the car, if we have to.”

“I’d prefer a motel, if it’s all the same to you,” Aoi said.  “I do not want to wake up and drive another ten hours after sleeping in a car.”

“Very fair.”  She waved goodbye to Sophia, who was closing up the museum, then headed over to the gravel driveway where the car was parked.  “Want me to drive this time?”

Aoi swung into the passenger seat.  “Go right ahead.”

Akane tossed her hair and straightened her back.  She did want to get at least another two or three hours of driving in before stopping for the night.

She noticed Aoi watching her, a strange expression on his face.  “Hmm?”

“Just – nothing,” he said.  Then, “I’ve missed you, Akane.”

She smiled, determinedly, almost sadly, as she revved up the car and pulled back onto the road.  “I’ve missed me, too.”

Zecret Santa 2017 gift fic for nursedianaklim

To: @nursedianaklim

From: @interabangs

Happy Holidays, nursedianaklim! I’m thrilled to be your Zecret Santa, especially since I love Sigma/Diana, so I went with a family-themed fic for them. Hope you like it!


Recursion

“Are you two married?”

Thunk.

Diana hadn’t meant to drop her fork, really. It just happened to slip from her hand, landing on the finely crafted plate her mother only used for special occasions. Diana’s face grew hot, and it took all of her willpower not to look at Sigma.

“Okay, bud,” Liz said, dragging out her son’s chair and turning it at an angle so it faced the kitchen. “You asked for it.”

“Mom, no!”

“We talked about this,” she said as Diana wished her own face would stop looking like a tomato. “Back to the kids’ table for you.”

Looking dour, Taylor took his regular dinner plate and stomped all the way to the kitchen, angrily swatting aside the curtain that separated it from the dining room.

“Sorry, sis,” Liz said with an apologetic shrug as she scooted the empty chair back into its spot.

Diana exchanged a quick glance with Sigma before picking up her fork and saying, in as casual a voice as she could manage, “Oh, um, it’s all right.”

She supposed she was telling the truth. Things at least had been ‘all right’ up until Taylor looked right at Sigma and asked him one of the Forbidden Questions – probably because it might have been true.

Diana couldn’t exactly blame her family for wondering. There she was, back in her hometown, in her parents’ nice three-story in the cul-de-sac at the end of Bishop Street. Just two weeks ago, she’d cut contact with her entire family, and two weeks before that, she was crying her eyes out to Liz about another – well, Diana hated using the word, but it definitely had been an Incident.

Not long after that, and she was sitting next to a man her family never met, after having begged everyone over the phone not to ask him about their relationship status.

To her immense relief, said man reached under the table, where her free hand was trembling on her lap, and he enveloped her hand with his.  Not pushing down on hers, not gripping it. Just keeping his there, for her to feel him.

Her hand stopped shaking, and she smiled down at her plate.

She hadn’t even planned on asking Sigma to come home with her. It had simply slipped out, like the fork from her hand.

He’d been folding laundry while she was peeling carrots for dinner, and it was one of those things she didn’t realize she said, until right after she heard it come out her mouth:

“I’m going to visit my parents and sister next weekend, since I missed Christmas dinner with them. Do you want to come?”

She peeled off a particularly large piece of carrot, watched it hit the sink, then said, her face flushing, “Oh, I mean, I know it’s really soon. You don’t have to come with me if you don’t want

Sigma had crossed the room within a few of those giant strides of his, and put his arms around her, gently. “Yes, Diana. I’d love to.”

So, yes, Sigma had been great about it – like he was about pretty much everything, except grocery shopping – but it wasn’t him she worried about.

Before she’d called Liz and broke down crying, Diana hadn’t spoken to her in months. She hadn’t spoken to anyone in her family for longer – not even Great Nana, whom Liz was always quick to point out favored Diana.

And she was back home, sitting in her favorite dining room chair, like she hadn’t snapped at Mom to stop badgering her about the bruises on her arms, and why she couldn’t come to Taylor’s birthday party.

To everyone’s credit, they were warm and welcoming ever since greeting Diana and Sigma at the door. Patrick – Liz’s husband – and Dad might have shaken Sigma’s hand a little too long, and Mom may have squeezed Diana a little too tight when they hugged. But Diana could tell they were all on their best behavior.

As if to prove her point, Dad broke the incredibly long, awkward bout of silence – save for forks clinking against plates – which hung in the air after Taylor’s departure. “So, Sigma, how’s UC?”

“It’s great,” he said, without missing a beat. “I enjoyed my break, but I’m glad to get back to work.”

Patrick asked, “And you’re going for a, what, Master’s degree?”

“Actually, since I managed to get all my paperwork in before the deadline, I’m pursuing my doctorate.”

Liz nearly choked on her steak. “Your… I’m sorry, but how old are you, again?”

Sigma took his hand off Diana’s, but, after she glanced down, she saw that he only did it to wipe his sweaty palm on his black pants. “I’ll be 23 this year.”

“Holy shi – I mean, good for you,” Liz said, coughing as Patrick patted her back.

It was Mom’s turn to grill Sigma, and when she opened her mouth, Diana suddenly wished Sigma hadn’t taken his hand away from hers. “And your field is… engineering, right? I wasn’t quite sure how that got you into the same fundraising event as Diana.” Mom laughed in that slightly disconcerting way where you knew you did something wrong and she was pretending it was fine, but it wasn’t.

“Well,” Sigma said, after taking a few moments to chew his food, but Diana knew he was remembering what they’d prepared for the past few nights, “my passion is engineering, yes, but I’d like to study diseases – and their cures, as well. There was a seminar about a particularly disturbing disease at the event, and I happened to sit next to Diana.” He paused to exchange a brief, but knowing smile with her. “She’s heard all about the details, but I’ll give you the short version: when I was in high school, there was a deadly outbreak in my hometown, and if I could help prevent something like that from happening again, then I’d do whatever I could.”

Diana exhaled a long, slow sigh of relief as Mom, Liz and Patrick nodded in polite sympathy.

Dad took a sip of wine, peering over the rim of the glass at Sigma. “You’re from Michigan, you said?”

“That’s correct, sir.” Diana had to bite the inside of her cheek to keep from laughing at the irony of Sigma saying ‘sir.’  He’d told Diana beforehand that he would be as honest with her family as possible, without explaining all the time-travel stuff that she knew they’d never believe. She and Sigma had to make up an entirely new story about how they met – in actuality, it could very well be true in one universe – but Sigma didn’t mind being open about his past. And, in this case, alternate future.

Dad put down his empty wine glass. “How come I’ve never heard about this disease outbreak?”

“Well, it will happen – it happened a long time ago, and the government made sure it didn’t spread in the news, so it wouldn’t cause any panic.”

“Really?” Patrick said, starting to become skeptical – he was so much like Dad it wasn’t even funny; no matter how much Liz protested – and Diana glanced at Sigma, unable to hide the worry from her face.

Sigma kept his gaze on her father and brother-in-law, and, as he launched into a far more detailed and boring explanation, his hand slipped back over hers.

Diana picked up her fork, smiling again.

—————————————–

“How long you known him, sweetheart?” Dad asked her not two minutes after Taylor and his three brothers yanked Sigma and Patrick out on the front lawn, turning them into human jungle gyms.

Diana stirred her hot cocoa, remember what she and Sigma had practiced in the car ride. She couldn’t have said three years, or even a year, when she felt like she’d known him much, much longer. She hadn’t mentioned anything remotely related to Sigma when she called Liz.

“I told you, it’s been a couple weeks,” she said, watching the dark liquid swirl in her cup after she lifted her spoon.

“Diana,” her mother said, gently.

“Okay – a few months.” It wasn’t a lie if both answers could be true at the same time.

“You really think it’s the best time for you to, y’know, be shacking up with someone new?” Liz asked.

“I’m not ” Diana protested, but the flush in her cheeks that she knew was visible, was about as obvious as if her nose began growing.

“Darling,” Mom said, the worry lines creasing between her eyebrows as she scooted her chair closer to Diana’s and brushed her hair back behind her ear. “I understand why you want to be with him. Really, I do. I mean, he’s polite, he’s intelligent, and good Lord, if Adonis was made flesh

Okay, let’s not get too carried away here,” Dad said gruffly, and everyone else laughed, even Diana.

“And the way he acts around you,” Mom went on, continuing to stroke Diana’s hair, like she did when there was a thunderstorm. “I can tell he’s taking this, taking you, very seriously. But what if he turns out to be like… well…”

“He won’t,” Diana said firmly. “I know he won’t. And I know you want what’s best for me, but please don’t worry about us. We’re taking things slow.”

“Hmm,” Liz said, chin resting on her hand as she watched Diana take a long sip of cocoa. “If ‘slow’ means making out in his car for five minutes down the street, I’d hate to know what ‘fast’ means.”

Diana’s cheeks burned even more at that. She set down her mug. At least she didn’t spit out anything.

Liz lowered her hand from her chin and reached it out toward Diana, across the dining room table. “Hey. I’m kidding. Look, you’ve been to therapy

And I’m still going,” Diana said, a bit hastily, but she was glad she sounded firm. It was one of the truths she and Sigma went over, like him being able to pursue a doctoral degree.

“We’re all incredibly glad to hear that,” Liz said, her hand still outstretched on the table. “If you know, for sure, that you really wanna be with this guy… If you feel safe with him and can trust him after such a short time, then…” Liz felt silent and looked to Mom for help.

She was as quick on the draw as Sigma had been earlier. “Then I suppose we can trust him, too.”

Diana looked out the window, toward the front yard where her nephews were hanging from Sigma’s arms and laughing as he flexed. Then she looked at her family’s faces, at the mingled concern and hope in their eyes.

Then, slowly, she reached her hand across the table, and pressed her palm against her sister’s.

—————————————–

“He doesn’t know about your family, does he?”

Diana studied Sigma’s expression, one of her favorite past times. He was starting to be more animated – not as much as she was, or most people, really. But she was fascinated with noticing each miniscule change in his face.

Liz, Patrick, and their kids had left ten minutes ago. Diana planned on heading out with Sigma soon, too, but not before giving him a more detailed tour of the house. Her room, which somehow still looked like it had years ago, was the last stop.

“He’s a good guy,” Liz had whispered in Diana’s ear as they hugged goodbye. “Tense, but I think it’s because he’s one of those old souls, y’know?”

Diana laughed, squeezing her sister tighter. “Thank you, Liz. I’m glad you like him.”

“He’ll take care of you. At least, he better. And if you ever stop banging him, I know at least twenty single moms who’d give an arm to be with him.”

“Liz, come on!” Diana said, but it took her a while to stop laughing.

As she looked up at Sigma while they stood in her old bedroom, he was gazing intently at the objects on top of her dresser drawer.

“No,” he finally replied, “I don’t think he knows. I’ve tried not to think about them lately, just in case. But I think if he meant them any harm, he would’ve gone through with it now.”

Diana nodded.  Neither she nor Sigma had uttered the name of their son, not since escaping the shelter. She wondered if they ever would.

Sigma’s breath hitched before he spoke again. “I’ll make sure he won’t touch anyone in your family.”

“He won’t.” Somehow, Diana was certain of that.

“Have you always had these?” Sigma asked, his gaze fixated on the row of dolls arranged neatly in a row – probably by Mom – and facing him with an identical expression.

“Since I was little, yes.” Diana had to stand on her toes to reach out and run her fingertips over the dolls, from the largest to the smallest. Most Matryoshka figures, Diana thought, were old women, but this set featured a wide-eyed, innocent looking red-headed boy.

“Do you know where you come from?” she whispered to the smallest one. “Do you care?”

She remembered holding the newborn boy, during the long hours it took for them to die.

Diana blinked, and when her vision cleared, there was a teardrop next to the smallest rd-haired doll.

“Hey, Diana,” Sigma said, bending his head so he could murmur in her ear, “let’s lie down for a little while, okay?”

She was about to protest before an uncontrollable yawn cut her off. “Oh, okay.” She turned off the light and guided Sigma to her bed. They settled down on the covers, facing each other – it was a bit cramped, but Diana didn’t care one bit.

Sigma wrapped his arms around her back, tracing slow, small circles on her sweater with his thumbs. “Thanks for asking me to come. I had a great time.”

“You were wonderful,” she told him with a wide smile. “I’m really glad you came with me.”

“We should bring Phi next time, if that’s all right with you,” Sigma said, closing his eyes. “I’m sure we could come up with a story for her.”

“Yes,” Diana said, stifling a yawn, “and then we can visit your family.”

“That sounds nice,” Sigma said, though his words were beginning to run together. “I’d like that.”

“Ten minutes,” Diana told him, “then we’re leaving.”

“Of course,” he said, leaning forward to kiss the top of her head before settling his back down on their shared pillow. “Whatever you say.”

“I mean it, Sigma,” Diana whispered as her eyelids fluttered close. “Ten minutes… and then… we’re heading home.”

“Scene: Truth or Consequences, New Mexico”

To: @silveredfoxxeh

From: @billyweird

Notes: Happy Holidays! I wrote you C-Team polyamory plus road trip plus lots of introspection and fluff.

Ao3


By the time Carlos found Akane lingering in the hallway outside the reception room, it was so late that drunk wedding guests had fallen asleep where they sat. Her back was to him and she held her dress up so the hem didn’t drag. Her bare feet were exposed and without her heels she’d lost three inches. She looked around dazedly, muttering to herself in Japanese, and startled when he tapped her on the shoulder. “Oh, Carlos!” She looked dewy and relaxed and like she couldn’t believe she made it this far. She sniffled, cried, and laughed all day and stumbled into her brother when they danced. They ended up in a bear hug swaying gently as the song petered out. Junpei’s hand was probably covered in makeup with how often he’d wiped her face.

Carlos smoothed down some hair that had fallen out of her elaborate style. When he touched her he thought that he should’ve asked her for one more dance today and one more kiss last night. “Congratulations.” His hand lingered on her cheek, and she held hers over it. Was it bad etiquette to tell a married woman she was beautiful if you weren’t her husband? The wedding wasn’t officially over—she was still a bride. Everyone told the bride she looked amazing. “I’m so happy for you two.”

Her face softened and she held onto his hand when he tried to pull away. “Then why do you look so sad?”

“Do I?” He stroked her cheekbone with his thumb, accidentally streaking some blush that clung to him like the bittersweet feelings he carried leading up to this day. “It’s champagne. You know how I get when I’m drunk.”

“You’re an awful liar,” she said. “‘Say what you need to while there’s time to say it.’” She remembered that far back, and from another history? Of course. She was Akane: she knew the answer to every trivia game show question, how to breakdown fringe science theories, and the Latin names for at least 20 breeds of rabbit.

“I guess I’m happy and I’m sad. I, uh…” Even head over heels for them, Carlos felt hopeless and clumsy with romance. “I picked a crap time to say goodbye, but I’m gonna miss you two. We had some good times, and you guys made even the darkest moments bearable.” And he’d never forget the morning after a bar crawl when Junpei clarified their kiss last night wasn’t impulsive by pulling him in by the collar. Sitting by the phone all night waiting for news that Junpei was out of surgery. Coming home from a 24-hour shift to find them sleeping in his bed. How proud Akane was when he wolfed down her first edible batch of spaghetti napolitan. “And you gave me something I never thought I’d have.” He was content with being alone until they all met, and now he counted the seconds until she walked away. “So thank you. Go be happy together.”

He expected her to smile knowingly and echo similar sentiments, until she brushed his hand aside. She stood on her tiptoes, braced her hands on his chest and tilted her head up. Her typical cue to kiss her. When he hesitated, she bit her bottom lip. “Hey.”

Their same dance—he put his hands on her waist, her wedding dress so fragile and smooth in his grasp, and kissed her until her lipstick rubbed off on him. “We’re happy with you,” she said when they pulled away, him holding onto her even as she eased back onto her feet. “I didn’t think I had to say that.” She smiled and rubbed her hand over his mouth so her fingers came away colorful. “Junpei is my husband. That doesn’t change that you’re mine, too.” She touched his mouth once more. “Speaking of him, I need to go.” She pushed his hands off her waist and turned away.

Carlos grabbed her arm but she slid through his grip, looking over her shoulder once before disappearing into a side room. Even though she was gone he floated in the moment suspended by hope and cautious joy, until she yelped and he ran to action. He arrived in time to find Junpei holding up an empty tumbler, gloating in Japanese to a passed out Aoi, before he too slumped forward. The glass shattered as he fell off the sofa.

Carlos and Akane spent the rest of the night in the ER, waiting to hear about her husband and brother who’d given themselves alcohol poisoning because they wouldn’t quit a drinking contest. “I can’t believe them!” she groaned, and Carlos put his arm around her and let her fall asleep on him.

Akane kept her promise: they continued showing up at his door unannounced or actually reaching out to make plans, and during those visits it was like they were never apart. He and Maria were the only Westerners invited to their second, traditional wedding ceremony in Japan (under strict orders not to tell Junpei’s family they were already married, as if Carlos spoke enough intelligible Japanese to direct them to the bathroom). They treated Maria and Aoi like their respective in-laws.

The dry spells—when they were gone for months at a time for work and semi-unreachable—ground him down. He found their toiletries and clothes around his place and sighed instead of smiled. It all came to a head when they hit three years together, including one year married for Junpei and Akane.

“It’s not that easy to up and leave here,” Carlos said for the millionth time and Junpei rolled his eyes.

“What’s hard about it? You move in for good, you don’t have to think about money again, you—”

“I’m not me anymore.” He couldn’t keep frustration out of his voice. “The Carlos you guys like is a firefighter. He’s a brother. He can take care of himself.” He slumped a bit. “You make me happy, but you’re not my whole life.”

“Does a life with us sound that bad?” Junpei narrowed his eyes, lay down on the couch, and looked at the ceiling like he knew his question was pointless. In the armchair, Akane murmured in her sleep and curled up tighter. Carlos suspected Junpei brought this up now because she wasn’t awake to tell him to respect Carlos’ feelings and drop the subject.  

“Don’t guilt trip me.”

“Answer my question.”

“If you have to ask…” Carlos began, but trailed off seeing how Junpei started snapping one of Akane’s hairbands on his wrist. Carlos sat with him on the couch and pulled Junpei’s legs onto his lap. It was a little-known Junpei fact that he liked foot massages, and he twitched when Carlos started at his arch. “My sister and my job need me, too.”

“It’s just easier when you’re around, you know,” Junpei said. He didn’t elaborate but let Carlos play with his stocking feet until he relaxed and fell asleep.

In the morning, Junpei made “Forget That Conversation Happened” crepes and Akane contributed by cutting fruit into cute shapes. Presentation and making tea were the only cooking skills her brother taught her that stuck. When she was done she put her chin on Junpei’s shoulder and pointed at the skillet as he worked. “No leeks,” he said in English so Carlos would understand, hoping to win someone over to his side.

“He’s saving you from yourself, Akane,” Carlos said, leaning in the doorway. Watching them together always charmed him even when they squabbled during the Decision Game.

“It tastes good.”

“Call your brother if you want catered to,” Junpei grumbled, but put his free hand over her arms wrapped around his chest.

“You think you’d both be nicer to me since our anniversary is coming up.” Their anniversary always seemed to be “coming up” when Akane wanted something. The real date floated because the day they all met was morbid and they never sat down and declared this an official Thing. The only tradition surrounding it was they traded off who got to pick the celebration.

“Speaking of.” Carlos tapped his fingernails against the fridge, over a picture of Maria in a forest in Oregon. He was low-key jealous that Aoi still lived with his sister. Carlos missed Maria to death even though he was happy she enjoyed her life on the road. She was enamored of the landscape, the people, and the weather and swore Oregon was a different world. “I know what I wanna do.” 

*

Akane floored the gas pedal until the needle passed 80mph and the desert and highway signs blazed by in Carlos’ peripheral vision. He thought of every high-speed collision scene he ever worked, and opened his mouth when Junpei beat him to the punch: “You’re gonna kill us!”

Akane giggled. “You never let me drive.”

“This is why!”

At least SUVs have a large crumple zone, Carlos thought—but oh fuck, rollover—"Akane for God’s sake!“ Carlos clenched his hand over hers on the wheel and she hesitated a moment before taking her foot off the pedal. Once they slowed to a highway-legal speed, he turned on cruise control. “No more Speed Racer.”

She pursed her lips. “You two used to be fun.”

In the backseat, Junpei sank back with relief and sighed. “I want a divorce.” It only took him four hours on the road to get to that old line. Carlos knew that at the next rest stop Junpei would still nag her to eat, holding a yogurt cup in one hand and fresh fruit in the other, and surrender when she grabbed two pudding cups and a bag of sour gummy octopi. When she ate those he refused to kiss her but, hey, more for Carlos. He liked that it was three years down the road and she still blushed when he bent down to steal a sweet-and-sour kiss.

Carlos daydreamed about this for years: a road trip through the middle of nowhere, taking pictures everywhere and driving each other insane. When he was thirteen his family tried it but he spent most of it sick, sunburned, and babysitting seven year-old Maria who got the worst of both. The destination was Truth or Consequences, New Mexico—a place he’d been too grumpy and ill to enjoy as a kid—and he pitched a 17 hour, 1,000 mile plus drive with promises of stops at Death Valley, Vegas, and Coconino National Forest along the way. Akane begged for at least one ghost town visit and he caved in the face of her excitement. Whenever Junpei tired of the ride or his companions, he complained that he just wanted to be in Truth or Consequences’ hot springs already.

“I need some music,” Carlos said, and the others looked to the car stereo in anticipation. A minute later they were all yelling along to “Womanizer.” Akane undid cruise control and picked up speed, Junpei lowered his window to put his head out, and what a sight they must’ve made: racing the wind with Britney Spears as their battle cry.

*

They nearly melted in Death Valley, and got fleeced in Vegas (where they also had to sneak out of their hotel via fire stairs before staff could kick them out due to noise complaints when they came back drunk, disorderly, and singing the associated Katy Perry song). They acted their age just enough to avoid arrest and just ridiculous enough to keep each other on their toes. Aoi threatened to block their numbers if Junpei and Akane kept calling him in the middle of the night to say they’d been abducted by aliens or saw a cryptid.

By the time they made it to Coconino, the car was full of eclectic souvenirs, empty water bottles and receipts for dinners at wherever sounded interesting. Refreshed at the thought of a nature park that wouldn’t broil them, they arrived early in the morning at Crescent Moon Ranch with their hearts set on splashing around in Oak Creek.

“Does he realize he’s gonna scare all the fish away?” Carlos said as he and Akane sat watching Junpei wade around, focusing intently on the water. He’d wandered in without care for his shoes and jeans, and was up to his knees in his own world when Akane called out to him.

“He thinks he is one. He always liked going swimming in school.”

“And you were a scaredy-cat at the pool?”

“No!” Akane adjusted her sunhat and pulled the brim down to hide her face. “I just liked having a swimming partner.”

Carlos tried to pull her hat up and she clutched it tighter. “So there are no stories of you crying in two feet of water or needing the teacher to carry you out?”

“None!”

“Junpei told me.” He snorted when she buried her face in the hat. “It’s cute. I’ll be your swimming partner.”

“Shh, I’m thinking of how to get back at him.”

That morning, Akane took one of his favorite photos from the trip: him carrying Junpei on his back in the water. They were mid-conversation about who could catch a fish with their bare hands, and then how to get Akane to join them. They ended up picking her up and dangling her between them and she didn’t stop shrieking and kicking until her feet hit the creekbed. They held her sandwiched between them to show they’d never let her drown.

(Akane’s revenge was picking the eeriest ghost town along the way and disappearing. When they searched for her, she jumped out at them from behind a corner and a group of kids giggled at Carlos’ and Junpei’s screams.)

*

Junpei booked their hotel because it was the the first one on the tourism website that boasted in-room hot spring baths: the Blackstone Hotsprings. He’d pored over their website before they left for the trip and decided on two rooms: one with the largest bath and the one beside it so the third person jettisoned there by hotel occupancy policy could come over at bedtime.

Carlos assumed he’d be that third while the married partners roomed together, but he watched Junpei pick up his and Carlos’ bags and drag them into the <i>As The World Turns</i> (God, he could remember Mom rushing him off to nap so she could watch that soap) room while Akane winked at him and settled into the solo room. Carlos lay facedown on the king bed and let Junpei toss their bags were he would. He drove the last stretch from Coconino and his back ached.

“These people are staring at me,” Junpei said, and when Carlos turned his head he saw on the wall a looming photo collage of former soap cast members with shellacked hair and garish makeup providing a study in Unfortunate Fashion History. “There better not be anything like that in the bath.” The thought of old soap stars watching him bathe was worse than the memory of Delta’s surveillance. Junpei turned to his serious task of arranging various alcoholic beverages in the fridge before rushing to see the spring room without unpacking anything else.

The spring bath passed his inspection: a three-walled corner tub with stone waterfall that promised hot spring water for unlimited in-room soaking. “I’ll see you in an hour,” he said, and shut the door in Carlos’ face. He heard water running, clothes hitting the floor, and a heavy contented sigh as Junpei settled into the tub.

Akane was taking a nap when he peeked in on her, so Carlos took the opportunity to snap photos of the room, the patio, and the stone and wood decor. Since Maria hit the road last year for her indefinite road trip to “experience real life,” he looked forward to the dozens of photos she sent him. She captured everything from architecture to animals, and more recently a tentative shot of a “new friend” she made in Oregon. She was a girl Maria’s age, who with her flower crowns and pastel clothes was the epitome of the style fifteen years ago. Maria beamed in every photo of them together, and though she wouldn’t say he had a feeling she’d bring her home to him someday.

Yay Carlos left the house! she replied. Are you having fun?? Send more pics of Junpei and Akane I miss them. 😦 </3

Definitely, he typed back, but you should’ve come.

Why it’s your anniversary!! A moment later she added, And idk when I’ll have time to drop in cuz I got a job. 😀 Tell you later xoxox.

Her response gave him pause. She was right but it felt odd to acknowledge that there was a part of his emotional life that didn’t include her. Odder still to realize that he’d texted her sporadically during the trip but hadn’t thought about her as often. Or that she wasn’t rushing to tell him about her big milestone. Look forward to it. Xoxo.

Junpei found him lying in bed, sipping a drink from the coffee bar in their room and watching a syndicated true crime show. He lay down next to him and moaned. “You gotta try that.” When Carlos didn’t respond, he looked at him. “Uh, hello?” He gestured to the show. “This can’t be that interesting.”

“I’m fine.” Carlos set the mug down on the floor. “Just had an epiphany is all.”

“Doesn’t look like a good one.” Junpei rolled onto his side and propped himself up on one elbow, resting his cheek on his fist. “What’s up?”

“I don’t think Maria’s coming home.” Thinking it and saying it out loud were two different but equally difficult things. “She likes Oregon, so that’s good, but I always thought this was temporary.” Even though she asked him to ship a bunch of her personal things to Oregon a month ago, and she hemmed and hawed when he asked what to do about renewing their lease.

“Sorry man.” Junpei muted the TV. “I know she means a lot to you. Akane would be a wreck if Aoi left.”

Carlos sat up and leaned back against the wall but bumped his head on the picture frame. Damn rich people and their haughty expressions. “I shouldn’t complain. I wanted her to be happy. If she is now, who am I to stop her?” The thought of moving back into a small apartment and putting her things in storage made his heart sink. She was a massive part of his life but his presence in hers shrunk more by the month.

“Good point.” Junpei sat up and folded his arms over his chest. “She’s gonna be fine. So will you.”

“I still have my job.”

“You still have us.” He leaned into it when Carlos kissed his temple. Junpei didn’t say more, but that was part of his comfort: that he didn’t need to do much to convey what anyone meant to him.

“I guess we should wake up Akane?”

“Or she’ll keep us up aaallll night talking about alien sightings in New Mexico.”

*

To her credit, Akane talked about aliens for only half the night. She was preoccupied with finding a restaurant with the most promising dessert menu, and walking her husband through a boutique of oddities while debating what they should get for Aoi. Junpei scoffed but lingered over the photography and clayworks like her, tilting his head once and asking Carlos if “this one looks like the Funyarinpa.” Carlos nodded along, and Junpei bought it and refused to let anyone else touch it.

“Hey Carlos,” Akane said as they stood outside the store debating where to go next. She grabbed his left hand and slid a truly ugly red-and-black ring onto his index finger. “Oh yay, it fits! It reminded me of a fire truck.” She held his hand between both of hers. “I know you can’t wear it at work, but you can for the rest of the trip.”

“Of course.” When she released him Carlos twisted the ring on his hand. Two over from the ring finger.

Junpei hadn’t had his fill of baths yet, and with his determination and a likely bribe managed to secure a last-minute evening booking for the largest outdoor private bath. The Turquoise Room could accommodate eight people with the bath to prove it, and after a quick shower Carlos sat on the ledge and kicked his feet in the hot water. He had to buy swimming trunks on the way here and he picked ones in “bunker gear yellow.” Junpei and Akane wore blue and red respectively, and Carlos thought to himself how silly that they made up the primary colors.

“Carlos. Bath. Relax,” Junpei ordered while submerged up to his neck with his eyes closed.

“I am relaxed.”

Akane scooted over to him on her soaking ledge and pulled on his arm until he sank into the water beside her. He was used to heat, but he still gasped and braced himself. After a while his muscles relaxed and he tilted his head up, admiring the sunset visible through the gap between the canopy and the walls. Everyone was quiet and still, and it let his thoughts wander. Whether he liked or not, his life wasn’t the same as when he was 28. He didn’t miss being broke and sleep-deprived and watching Maria sleep away her childhood. Twenty-eight year-old Carlos would never believe that in his thirties he’d have his sister back and time for friends outside of work and two people who loved him.

If everything was better now, why was he so anxious about letting go and allowing himself to enjoy something new?

“Can we just keep SHIFTing back to this day?” he said. “Could we go back to this exact moment in time whenever we want?”

“Agreed,” Junpei said. He hadn’t moved from his exact spot and Carlos worried he’d fall asleep.

Akane shook her head and perched her heels on the ledge so she’d curl in on herself. “You could, but eventually you have to make another choice: to stay in that loop or let go.”

“Huh?”

“You can’t resist the flow of time forever.” She tilted her head. “Well, I suppose SHIFTers could, but eventually we would have to choose between living in the past or the present.” She put her arms around her knees and looked over the water. “I think about it a lot. Radical freedom is a big responsibility, and I’m still not used to it.”

“You take 20 minutes to pick your morning tea,” Junpei said fondly. He rose and waded over to them, sitting at Akane’s feet because there was no more room on the ledge. “But isn’t it cool to know you can technically do anything, even if it’s unappealing? You never know the good that might come of it.” When neither answered, he added, “Or maybe I’m just talking out my ass.”

“It’s terrifying,” Carlos admitted. They both looked at him with concern and surprise. Their rock was not invulnerable. “To know that right now I’m free to do whatever I want. I know how to deal when things are hard. When everything seemed impossible, I had a sense of purpose. I did only what I had to do for others.” He looked between them and held Akane’s hand, and she reached out and took Junpei’s when he offered it. “I wasn’t unhappy per se, but I’m happier now.” He looked at them both but couldn’t hold eye contact when he spoke his next thought. “And I want to go with you. What if I regret it and we can never go back to the way things are?”

“Carlos.” Junpei shook his head. “That’s the point—when you can do anything of your own free will, you’re the only one to blame if you hate how it ends. It scares the shit out of everyone.”

Carlos shrugged. “Point taken.”

“Junpei and I aren’t the same people we were when we got married.” Akane squeezed her husband’s hand and Junpei returned it. “But continuing with the idea of radical freedom, we choose each other every day despite the headaches and fears. Nothing forces us to stay together or break up except ourselves.” She ran her thumb over Carlos’ hand in circles. “And maybe you’re second-guessing because you realize all your insurmountable obstacles are in your head.”

Carlos mulled over her words before letting go and getting out of the bath. “You might be right.” He toweled off and sat down in a turquoise Route 66 motel chair and looked back up at the sky. The sunset wasn’t a pleasant distraction anymore even though it was still beautiful. He chose to stay with them for three years. He chose to go on a road trip. He chose to admit that he wanted to live with them. What now?

Junpei and Akane exchanged words in Japanese, muffled by the fountain in the room. He never learned enough to keep up with them, but he was familiar with their habits. If they were speaking it in front of him they were either talking about work, a surprise, or something intimate they could only explain to each other. Suddenly, Junpei got out and helped Akane up. He wrapped a towel around her when she shivered. “We’ve got two in-room baths between us,” he said when Carlos pointed out their 50 minutes weren’t up.

They piled into the same bedroom and Junpei and Akane covered him like cats. They went over all the photos they’d taken between them, and idly discussed how they might just come back here next year. Akane had even more sweets delivered and Carlos marveled that she could eat dessert for dinner and still crave a candy bar, a pastry, and a sundae afterward. She held it out of Carlos’ reach when he tried to grab it, and glared when Junpei took it from her and shoved a spoonful in his mouth. They found a monster movie marathon on TV and watched it late into the night.

At 2AM, Junpei flopped back on his pillow and nudged Akane away from him with his feet. “I’m exhausted. Go to sleep.”

“I’m not tired,” she complained and then crawled over Carlos to bracket him. They both fell asleep before him, leaving him to think in circles again. Of course those two turned his existential crisis into a philosophical discussion that exacerbated it.

He looked to Junpei on his left: the one who took the gun from his hand after he killed Delta and never once judged his decision. Who hated phone calls but sat through every late night confession that Carlos couldn’t stop thinking about it. Who taught him how to kiss and hoarded all the pillows when they shared a bed.

He looked to Akane on his right: the one who never gave up hope they could find a peaceful solution to the Decision Game. Who never hesitated to turn dinner into a debate and refused to back down unless someone made a good argument against her. Who couldn’t sing but thought she was an idol.

Both of them, who admired him for who he was and not just what he did. They reminded him every time they came back to him. They never said the words but always showed that they loved and needed him. Who just might wait for him until he told them to leave. Carlos pictured himself at a crossroads, stepping forward and backward in all possible directions before all the branches merged into a single path.

Carlos woke to Junpei shaking him. “Dude, stop talking in your sleep. You’re so loud even I woke up.” Beside him, the bed shifted as Akane sat up.

“I was?”

“About little green men,” Akane joked, and pushed his hair back from his forehead. “And your past life as a train robber.”

“Take a sleeping pill or something.” Junpei slid his legs over the edge of the bed, but Carlos grabbed his elbow and tugged him back so he fell across his chest. “Hey!” He wriggled but Carlos put his arm around him and even Junpei’s strength couldn’t defy a steadfast firefighter.

“I guess I was thinking out loud.” Carlos’ throat hurt and he swallowed before continuing. “About radical freedom.”

Akane perked up. “Yes?” She was always up for a meandering hypothetical conversation. Junpei resigned himself to his fate of being stuck awake with them and stopped struggling.

“I think it’s easier to say I ‘have to’ do something than think about the alternative. I ‘have to’ wait for Maria. I ‘have to’ be a firefighter to still know myself. I’m jealous that it all comes so easily to you two.”

“I choose to stay sober during these conversations,” Junpei added. “It’s not an easy choice.”

“And I choose not to gag you right now,” Akane said.

Carlos pushed through their banter. “So…what if I chose to stay with you two?” He hesitated, but kept going with his mouth running faster than his thoughts. “Staying in Nevada is ideal, or at least in America. Somewhere where Maria is only a few hours away if she needs me. But if I had to I’d go farther away. I actually kinda like traveling. And my job—”

“Carlos,” they both interrupted at the same time. Did he sound like a fool? “Who says HQ is in Japan?” Junpei said. “Or that we can’t find a use for say…a fire investigator?”

Akane nodded. “Someone with EMT training, too. Or search and rescue? You could still help people.”

“Those are options.” There were too many of those all of a sudden, and for a moment he feared he spoke too soon and he couldn’t take anything back without losing them. “Where would we go?”

“A home big enough for you and us and my brother.” Akane grabbed his hand and began playing with his fingers, lingering over the ring he hadn’t taken off. “And rabbits.”

“I’ve only ever had cats.”

“My brother likes cats. And you.”

“Really?”

“We’ll make him understand you’re there to stay,” Junpei said.

“I would be,” Carlos said softly. “I’d need time to quit my job. I can’t just disappear on them.” And then he’d need months, years to mourn what he left behind. That grief and the happiness he imagined with Junpei and Akane could co-exist, but it would take time.

“We won’t handcuff you and drag you on a plane today.” Junpei twisted in his grip and Carlos finally let him go so he could roll over and prop himself up on his elbows. “You’re not doing this because you think you ‘have to,’ right?”

“Everything is a free choice.” He chucked Junpei under the chin. “This one is messy and complicated, but it’s mine.” He felt the course of his life diverge and one path lock into place like train tracks. No reversing the course, no way of telling his eventual destination. Just the enthusiastic, clumsy kisses they peppered his face with right now, and the hope that someday he’d look back and thank God that he took a dip in the healing waters of Truth or Consequences and finally cleared his mind.

expanse

To: @specialagentartemis

From: @dornishsphinx

Merry Christmas, @specialagentartemis! This got a little out-of-control word count wise, but I hope you enjoy!


expanse

Not even having the energy to close his eyes all the way, Junpei let his head loll back against the headrest. His awareness of the landscape outside the car faded away, desert sun and sand mixing themselves up together into a yellow blur. There was nothing keeping him alert anymore, or at least nothing pressing enough to ward off the tiredness. Even the initial spark of mortal terror brought on by Clover’s driving had faded away after the first few accident-free hours.

He almost didn’t notice it when the scenery started changing, the car drifting to a halt, or Clover contorting herself around to shout at the backseat.

“C’mon! Shopping time!” she said, waving her hand in his face.

Unwillingly, Junpei found himself blinking into focus. Beside Clover, sitting in the shotgun position, Lotus – she’d still not mentioned her real name and honestly, at this point it would have felt weird to outright ask – was digging through the front compartment, counting out a stack of dollar bills that had been stuffed in there along with maps, water and non-perishables.

“Don’t forget about getting us actual food, okay?” she said, with the commanding tone of voice that, now that Junpei thought about it, ought to have marked her as a mother from the start, “And don’t go overboard, got it? We don’t want to run out. And be careful–”

“Okay, okay,” said Clover, “Let’s go, you two.”

“I think it would be best if I stayed with the car,” said Light, sitting on Junpei’s right.

 “Ugh, you’re just too lazy to go shopping, aren’t you?” said Clover.

“Oh? Insults now?” said Light, not denying it.

“Whatever, spoilsport. Junpei, you’re coming with me!”

“What?” said Junpei, startled at the conversation turning to him, “Why does he get to make an excuse?”

“You want to go exploring, right? Because you’re cool, unlike my lame-ass brother over there. Right?”

Really, it shouldn’t have worked. Junpei consoled himself with the knowledge that he’d wanted to go all along as he dragged himself out of the car alongside Clover and made their way into town.

“So,” he said, exercise starting to wake him up a little, “This is America, huh?”

He supposed it was scenic, in a bleak way, nothing but desert and sky for miles past a few square buildings dotted around on what was barely a town square. It was hardly what you imagined from the movies, though.

“Well, the complex had to be off the grid,” mused Clover in response as she ducked into one of the less dilapidated buildings, “But you know, apparently Las Vegas is in this state. We should totally go.”

Junpei imagined it as he followed her in.

“That… does sound like fun,” he admitted, “Though I don’t think we have the money.”

She barked out a laugh. “Pff. Yeah. You think they’d have left us more as recompense, considering what they put us through.”

The past day flashed through his mind. He took in a shaky breath. Akane was alive because of it. At least there was that. It it would have been nice to confirm it with his own eyes, though, be able to talk to her — be able to get some answers. It seemed that some things were impossible, though.

“Junpei!” cried Clover.

Junpei whipped around, ready to face any threat – now that he thought about it, it was unlikely he’d not be on edge for at least the next few months – before quickly taking a step back to avoid the small, dark object Clover had decided to swing at his face.

“Whoa! What the—hey!”

He snatched it out her hand before bringing up whatever it was to his eye level. It turned out to be a keyring with a spiky cactus attached; it had the sort of demented grinning face that you’d be forgiven for expecting to only appear on Hallowe’en memorabilia.

“Get this, there’s a whole line of them,” said Clover, stepping to the side and revealing the shelf behind her with a flourish, “Sad cactus, angry cactus – uh, constipated cactus? And – jeez, I don’t even know what this one’s supposed to be. Existential dread cactus maybe? Betrayal cactus?”

He stared at the rack of tack before him, glorious and green.

“I need ten of everything.”

“Not nine?” said Clover.

At the look he sent over at her, she shrugged. “I hear laughing at trauma helps with the healing process?”

“I’m pretty sure you’re supposed to wait more than—” He checked his burner phone and counted in his head, before groaning.

“…Nine hours?”

“Shut up.”

Clover grinned, all her teeth showing. “Oh, man, you just make it too easy.” She dragged out the last consonant, like the thin whine of a siren. She gasped before Junpei could come up with a suitably witty repartee. “Is that—it is! Junpei, check out the angel one! Aw, it even has a little harp—I so need to get it for Light!”

“Huh? Why?”

“Oh! Uh. Never mind, I mean—”

But then she looked at Junpei, a flash of resolution in her eyes. “Ah, screw it. Light’s a harpist, a really good one – you should come to one of his shows sometime!”

For a moment, Junpei felt warm inside. He reflected on how much this odd little friendship of theirs had blossomed since they’d met, disoriented and scared, on the deck of that fake ship. Maybe it wasn’t much; something that, under normal circumstances, would really be nothing at all. Yet after all this, the fact she was talking like she was expecting their relationship to continue on, no longer a necessity and now a choice—

Well. It was nice.

“So, hey, uh, can I ask you something?” he asked as he moved his way towards the neighbouring novelty clothing rack.

“Yeah?”

“I mean, I didn’t say anything before, since I just thought you were still keeping it under wraps, but—”

“Argh, just spit it out already,” she said, in a tone of cheerful exasperation.

“So, you really just used your real name as a code name?”

It wasn’t really worth getting petty over, but goddamn, Junpei had actually come up with a really good one before being denied its use.

“Hey, everyone else was coming up with all these super clever number-based codenames. You know how stressful it was, trying to think of something that didn’t sound dumb beside them?”

“I don’t think it would have been that hard to come up with something less dumb than ‘Santa’, honestly.”

Clover considered this. “I suppose it does seem a little contrived now that I think about it. And jeez, he had more time than anyone to come up with it as well! What a dick.”

“Wow. Take that, guy who isn’t here.”

“Hey, maybe we should make a voodoo doll of him out of one of these cacti and hurt its feelings. Like this one!” She grabbed an ornament of a woodcutter in the process of cleaving a cactus into pieces, crosses painted over its black eyes. “Looks painful enough.”

Junpei grinned, but it drooped a little as memories floated into his head, memories of that other doll and that hilltop far across the world from here and young Akane Kurashiki’s smile.

“Junpei!” said Clover. “Hey, space cadet. Earth to—”

“Yeah, yeah,” said Junpei, “Shouldn’t it be soft, though, for all the needles?”

“Emotional barbs can affect – uh, whatever this is made of – just as much as some felt doll. And it has more than enough needles stuck in it already, doncha think?”

Junpei laughed: no matter the situation, he was duty-bound to find puns hilarious.

“So, hey, can I ask something else?”

Clover groaned, but since the smile never left her face, Junpei thought he was good.

“Ugh, what is it now?”

“How come Light,” he said, plunging his hands into a black hole of t-shirts, “Didn’t come with us? I’d have thought he’d not want to leave you alone after—everything.”

Clover’s face turned serious. “Oh, that. Light’s making sure that he doesn’t escape.”

It was obvious who she was referring to.

“Ah, yeah. That’s a good idea.”

“Yeah,” said Clover, quietly. “Though that’s not the only thing. He’s also keeping an eye on that mummy woman.”

“I know we’ve all bonded or whatever, but you might want to ask Lotus before deciding—”

“Argh, you know who I mean. Alice-All-Ice.”

“Oh, did he tell you through—” He extricated one of his hands to make a vague motion in lieu of delving into the psycho-babble his brain was still holding off on acknowledging as real.

“Mm,” said Clover, noncommittally. “There’s something off about her. Like she’s acting nice and unassuming, but I feel like she’s planning something.”

“Like what?”

“I dunno. Something.”

Junpei supposed she’d probably know better than him. This was only his first foray into the world of kidnapping, morphic resonances and pseudo death games, after all – though now that he thought about it, maybe it wasn’t the most encouraging sign that Clover and Light had got caught up in it twice now.

Eh, whatever. He put it out of mind and, after that, the shopping trip passed by quickly. It was strange: he’d only met Clover a day ago, yet she was so easy to be around, laughing and joking and making disparaging comments about overpriced merchandise together. They eventually ended up picking up twelve of the keyring cacti – in all honesty, there were only eight that they’d particularly wanted out of the lot of them, but the feeling of vindictive satisfaction that came in avoiding the number nine while still managing to fully take advantage of the 3-for-2 deal was worth the extra five dollars.

“Hey!” said Clover, when they finally arrived back at the car, punting the angelic cactus through the open window into Light’s surprisingly dextrous hands, “Look what we found!”

Light felt the object with a frown. “Well, it certainly feels like a felt toy,” he said, “But other than that—” He broke off as he got to the little harp and stroked around to feel the wings. “Is this an angel?”

“More like a prince,” said Junpei, fully aware that nobody would understand the joke and not really caring at this point.

“It’s a cactus angel,” cackled Clover.

“With halo and all!” Junpei chimed in.

They grinned in unison before bursting into laughter.

Light’s mouth quirked into a smile. “I take it you picked this out for me, then?”

“Yep!” said Clover. “And that’s not all!” She extended her arm out, revealing a bag crammed full of so many bits and bobs that the shop’s owner had near cried tears of joy while they paid – apparently, tourists didn’t come out to Nowheresville, Nevada very often. “C’mon, c’mon! Take your pick!”

As Light delicately explored the contents of the bag, somehow still managing to look refined while elbow-deep in cactus memorabilia, Junpei pulled out the next gift from another, smaller bag.

“Hey, Lotus!”

In the front, Lotus looked up from the map in surprise.

“You got something for me too?”

Suddenly, a wave of embarrassment hit Junpei for some reason.

“Well, I mean. Yeah. We got you a shawl,” he said, handing it over. “I mean, I know my arms got super sunburnt when I went to Tottori one time, and uh. Well, you’re, uh. You’re wearing less than I was at the time, so—” 

“That’s surprisingly thoughtful of you,” she said, thankfully interrupting him. Lotus let it tumble out of her arms, her smile turning to bewilderment and then to outright suspicion as everyone took in the green monstrosity of a pattern.

“This isn’t some round-about way of calling me prickly, is it?”

“Nah,” said Seven before Junpei could save himself with a quick denial, “He’s told you to your face more than a dozen times already, I don’t think he needs to.”

Seven yelped as Lotus took her revenge in the form of a pinch. It looked far more half-hearted than the other attacks she’d launched during the game, but Clover still interjected before the situation could escalate: “That’s not all though!”

“Really? This is more than enough for little old me, you know—”

But Clover had already launched Lotus’ cactus into her lap. Lotus peered down at it, uncertain. She picked it up, pinched between two long fingernails. “What—” she managed to get out, before pausing. The rest of the passengers took in the furious little techie cactus sewn onto a plush replica desk chair, needle-fingers extended onto a little plastic keyboard and monitor.

It was a strange choice, Junpei knew, but somehow it had called to him more than the others when considering getting a joke present for Lotus. His fingers had hovered over it, wavering in confusion, something telling him that this would be perfect despite having absolutely no evidence that was the case. Clover had come up behind him, regarding the situation for a long moment, before picking it up for him. “It just works that way, sometimes,” she’d said, quietly, and then Junpei had realised why, that a switch in his brain had been permanently flipped, and did that mean his life would never be the same again—

Lotus cleared her throat, then, and Junpei snapped to the present. “Thank you,” she said, still clearly a little freaked out. “But, hey, isn’t Seven looking rather plain over there on his lonesome?”

“Wha—” said Seven.

Junpei immediately jumped on the hook: “Oh, but we can’t leave you out! You’ve done just as much for us, you know!”

“All part of the job, you know,” said Seven, just as fast, though it was too late for him. He and Clover moved in tandem, almost like the two of them were actually the ones with the morphogenetic link, one pink-nailed hand swiping Seven’s hat off his head while the other slapped on a bright green baseball cap in its place with all the precision and speed of a slam-dunk.

“Ah,” said Light, tilting his head towards the scene, “I must say it suits you.” His small smile widened as Clover giggled.

“What the—” Seven said loudly, patting his new headpiece, before angling himself towards the rear-view mirror. He paused, a considering look on his face. “Actually, this does look pretty good.”

“Oh, really? I’m glad to hear it,” said Light, airily.

“Now then—hand over the rest of the goods!”

“Oh, but of course, officer,” said Light, still with an amused tilt to his head. Seven turned out to be far less graceful than he had been, rooting around the goodie bag like a golden retriever digging up a bone. As he did so, Lotus made a few derisive comments, though she did lean over to pick things out things he’d unearthed from time to time.

“Hey, Alice,” said Clover. Alice, who had been taking in the scene with bemusement, looked startled at being addressed. She pointed at herself with a raised eyebrow.

Clover nodded, flicking her head towards the bag. Alice looked at her with confusion before her expression shifted to something like—maybe being touched?

“Thank you,” she said, haltingly, waiting her turn before hesitantly peering into the bag. Junpei and Clover both watched her carefully as she picked up a novelty bracelet, little cacti in a circle pressing their branches together in a facsimile of clasped hands, with a smile. She didn’t seem to notice the mummy cactus they’d put in there, though with the mountain of goods Seven had laid to the side, she should have.

Was it possible that she wasn’t…?

Junpei glanced over at Clover, who gave him a minute shrug. It was clearly meant to be carefree, but she was still biting her lip. He placed a hand on her shoulder, unthinkingly; she jumped a little, then huffed at him, but nonetheless patted his hand with her own before leaping back into the verbal fray.

“Hey, Seven!” she said, in mock-shock, “Are you really taking all of those? You know you’re supposed to share, right?”

Junpei snickered as Seven protested that he was the most generous person he knew, and, in what he hoped were still the private recesses of his mind, he found himself hoping this wasn’t just a brief moment of two people traumatised by a death game coping together, but something that could last for years. Maybe even the buds of genuine friendship. He didn’t bring it up, obviously, not wanting to sound like a sap, but still – he couldn’t help but hope she felt the same.

As the group devolved into friendly bickering, Lotus, now beshawled, started up the engine, the car slowly making its way back onto the desert highway. Alice surveyed the rest of the group, playing with the bracelet uncertainly, uncomfortably aware of the man they didn’t think she knew was tied up in the back of the car and now even more unsure of what sort of people she was riding with, while somewhere else in the desert, at some other time, a girl sat in the seat of her own getaway car, eating strips of jerky as it drove in the opposite direction.

“Are you alright?” Aoi asked her, still on tenterhooks, unable to quite believe she was properly, physically there, unable to quite believe everything had worked out. Well, there had to be at least one timeline where it had, Akane mused to herself, since that was the entire point of the exercise.

Despite his worry, Aoi’s hands remained steady on the top of the wheel. She could sense the worry beneath his deliberately calm veneer; it was like he was a kid trying to get close to a wild animal, trying to follow the common adages to be still and collected, no matter what, otherwise it would run away, vanish into the woods—

Become a mass of ashes, floating through other times, other timelines

Hm. Maybe it was only fair to let him act that way. It had been mere chance that he was the Aoi Kurashiki who existed within the successful timeline, after all. There were a multitude of other Aoi Kurashikis: grieving Aoi Kurashikis; Aoi Kurashikis watching their plan of nine years fall through; dead Aoi Kurashikis.

She’d never liked looking at those ones. Not at all.

“Akane,” said Aoi, softly, no doubt presuming she was reflecting on her own trauma rather than his, “You should get some rest.”

“You know there’s work still to do,” said Akane, “We’ll need to be ready.”

“Exactly,” he said, in that parental tone of voice he never should have needed to learn so young, “You should get rest now, while you can.”

“Aren’t you tired, too?” she asked. Aoi made a grumbling noise; she interrupted him before he could make an excuse. “Do you know what percentage of traffic accidents are caused by tired drivers?”

Aoi groaned. “Can we stop with the numbers. Just—just for a little while?”

“So you are tired,” said Akane, triumphantly.

Aoi clamped his mouth shut.

“I guess,” he said, after a little while. “There’s been a lot to do. A lot at stake. There still is.”

“Some of it’s done, at least,” she said, realising at that moment he needed to hear it. “I’m really here now. You don’t have to go it alone.”

Aoi’s smile turned beatific. The sun pouring in through the car windows illuminated his exhausted, kindly face as it turned towards her, as though he were a stained-glass depiction of one of the early martyrs come to life.

“You’re here,” he said, soft in the real way now.

“I am indeed. So how about we fuck up some bad guys now, hmmm?”

A scandalised look replaced the affectionate smile. “Wh—”

“Oh my, you’re not going to tell me not to swear now? Not when you’ve been doing nothing but for the past nine hours.”

“First of all, it’s already been nine hours since I stopped,” said Aoi, “And I was being in character.”

Akane scoffed. “Oh, like you don’t swear all the time when you’re not around me,” she said. Before he could protest, she proffered the pack of jerky he’d insisted she eat to keep up her strength until they got to shelter. “Want some?”

Aoi glared at her, but then sighed and relented. “Let’s fuck up some bad guys,” he grumbled, “But first, get some sleep.”

Compromise won, Akane leant back in her seat, glancing over at the clock where it was placed in between them.

Their getaway car would approach the Nevada border at the exact same time as the other one did, though on the exact opposite side; she’d seen it, while scouting out this particular route to the future. She’d not planned it that way, which she liked. It felt almost like the universe synchronising itself to her goals, like it wanted them to succeed.

The last digit flipped over from 26 to 27. She counted each second as it passed, eighteen of them. The two cars passed over the border. She traced it in her mind, that imaginary line, thinking of it connecting Aoi and her to the rest of them, and to Junpei Tenmyouji most of all. A moment—then it had passed.

It was only then that she allowed herself to lean back and close her eyes. There would be no nightmares of the past, she decided, only dreams of the bright future she and Aoi would build, both for the world and for all those they’d used and sacrificed.   

“Aoi,” she said, meaning to tell him to wake her up when he got too tired so she could drive, but like a wave, all those nine years coalesced around her, sleep coming with them.

FIN

——-

I hope you enjoyed it! I ended up combining two of your prompts, though the first one became a bit more “developing best-friendship” rather than actual best-friendship wrt Junpei and Clover and the second one with Aoi and Akane ended up being slightly less cool-masterminds and a bit more sleep-deprived-masterminds than you asked for, haha.

Again, Merry Christmas when it comes!