To: @mudbunnie

From: @rypeltajaroll

Here’s a little something for @muddbunnie! No matter how hardcore Akane’s esper powers are, she always seemed a bit clumsy to me. So, I figured she might have a hard time ice skating… like, even without the ice skates… But that’s okay! Junpei is a patient teacher (not that he’s much better himself)!

Happy holidays! ❤

Zecret Santa submission for Juniiper

To: @juniiper

From: @aromanticsouda

Here’s fic, I also have an image; two gifts!  To make up for being late and also in case juniiper dislikes one of them

AO3 link

Akane was grateful for this timeline.

There was something strange about it, though. Whose mind had Delta read, to discover that this timeline could have been doomed? Akane had experienced so many timelines for herself, jumped so many times, but she’d never seen it. Never seen the future which fell to the hands of a religious fanatic who wiped out the planet. However, Delta knew it existed; and he could only gather information from the minds of others. Somebody had seen it, somebody that Delta once met. It couldn’t have been Carlos, that was for sure. He had strong abilities, but had no memory of his jumps whatsoever till Akane instructed him on it. Delta couldn’t read something which just wasn’t there at all.

As for Sigma and Phi… The memories that they had were a completely different set. Nothing that those two remembered could be from any time in between the decision game and the third nonary game if it hadn’t happened in the timeline which contained the third nonary game. That was the only progression forward that those versions from the future could have ever experienced; it just wasn’t possible for those alternate timelines to lie within their minds.

Nonetheless, Akane couldn’t allow herself to dwell on the idea, could she? What mattered was that this timeline was different; it was different from all of the others. Every single one. There wasn’t one other timeline out there where Akane got to experience this, where she was alive and happy and not forging on alone, fighting for a better future and committing atrocities, or simply hiding away waiting for the world to end in a timeline where she was the only member of C team to survive. This was the good end. This was the timeline where she could spend Christmas with Junpei.

One million Christmases, and not a single one this wonderful. Of course, Aoi was always great to be around, and he’d made her childhood Christmases a bright spot in an otherwise unsatisfactory life, but there was something to be said about a timeline where she could spend the holiday with her amazing brother and the love of her life. Especially considering the fact it was one of a kind! After so many, many decades of strife (albeit, with their moments) cluttering her memory, it was nice to throw that all to the wayside for once to just enjoy herself.

“Kanny, what’s up?” Junpei questioned, leaning close to her cheek, “You’re sort of spacing out. Everything okay?” On autopilot, he lifted a hand to her forehead, remembering what had happened during the second nonary game. She snapped out of her train of thought to giggle and grab his hand, pulling it away from her head but not letting go of it.

“I’m fine! Actually, I was just thinking about…” She glanced away, cheeks flushed the smallest little bit, “How nice this is, spending Christmas with you.”

“Well,” He chuckled, shrugging, “It’s not really a unique experience… right?”

“It sort of is…” She mumbled, her smile growing a bit, “Believe it or not, Jumpy, this is actually… the only timeline out there, where we can get to do something like this.”

“Wait, seriously?” He questioned, then gave her a scrutinous look, “Wait, doesn’t that mean that… our relationship has no branching paths? Come on, that’s not fair! What if I make a mistake?”

“I guess we’ll just have to deal with it the way normal people do,” Akane shrugged, “Roll with it and work through our problems!” She laughed again, “Doesn’t that sound dreadful? If we did that ever before, well, we’d both be long dead! Anyway, the fact that it isn’t branching is something that I say we should appreciate. It means we won’t be in enough danger to jump!”

“Maybe you won’t be, but if I do make one of those mistakes I mentioned…” Junpei trailed off with a lopsided grin, and Akane pouted for a second before getting on her toes to give him a quick kiss then offer her retribution.

“Danger of being sent to sleep on the couch, maybe…” She scolded with a teasing smirk.

“Yeah, a fate worse than death!” Junpei joked right back.

“Oh really?” She questioned, “What other sort of things are worse than death for you?”

“A huge number of mundane annoyances,” He answered as a matter of fact, “Not at all limited to ‘being denied not only the concept of getting laid, but also innocent spooning’. I’d also consider it worse than death to be able to smell cookies but not eat any, or to be inflicted with a curse that removed my sense of humor.”

“I suppose that last one is a mundane annoyance due to the fact you hardly have a sense of humor in the first place? A more accurate curse would be one that made it so you couldn’t make puns, since that seems to be the only joke you’re capable of to begin with,” Akane chuckled, then wandered over to the kitchen, “Also, I’m going to grab…” She took two oven mitts and put them on her hands, “Both the oven mitts we own…” She opened the oven, “And stand on a chair, holding these cookies over your head and giving you no way to get them!”

“Cruel mistress of my heart…” Junpei groaned as he watched Akane climb onto the chair, but then approached her, “Too bad for you, I know how to get the cookies.”

“My plan is foolproof! You’re just bluffing!” Akane cackled, holding the tray aloft.

“Not so airtight, Kanny my dear,” Junpei chuckled, then stepped up and reached up to her sides, tickling her. She squirmed and laughed at this, and several cookies fell off of the sheet onto the floor before she was able to get a handle on herself- and Junpei stopped, “Tada!”

“That doesn’t give you any cookies, you’re just feeding the floor!” She managed through laughter, “Thwarted again, Jumpy!”

“Not so fast!” He swooped down and picked up the cookies as fast as he could, “Five second rule! …Er, well, ten second rule,” He bit into one, “I’m still gonna eat them. The kitchen floor’s pretty clean.”

“It’s not clean at all, we haven’t mopped in two months!” Akane protested, climbing down from the chair to put the cookies on the kitchen counter, “Though I guess it does look pretty clean… Except for the cookie crumbs.”

“That’s because I mopped it earlier today, while you were at work,” Junpei explained, “I figured with our friends coming over tomorrow we should at least show a little bit of effort, right? You’re busy with work and I’m busy with classes, but if the floor isn’t disgusting then we’ll seem a little bit more like functioning adults who aren’t just barely managing on our own!”

“I don’t think any of our friends would care much…” Akane trailed off, crossing her arms and side-eyeing the wall, oven mitts still on, “I mean, think about it. Every single friend we have… Has seen us brutally murdered in some timeline or another. I think the social misstep of being a corpse far outranks being mild slobs.”

“Well, there is also the benefit of being able to eat these floor cookies without getting salmonella,” Junpei shrugged as he bit into another floor cookie.

“The cookies that I definitely didn’t rub raw chicken on after removing from the oven?” Akane asked.

“Yeah right, there’s not even any raw chicken in the house,” Junpei rolled his eyes, “If there was I would know, I looked in the fridge like twelve times today.”

“And that’s what stands out to you about my joke?” Akane chuckled, then pulled off her oven mitts, ‘Well, I guess you had to shoot me down somehow.”

“I wasn’t kidding about looking in the fridge so many times, though. What exactly are we, the hosts, going to provide for this Christmas Potluck?” Junpei questioned, raising his eyebrows.

“Oh, I’ll go shopping in the morning. If I tried to get to the store anytime in the past week, it would just be too crowded,” Akane shrugged, “Don’t worry, I do have a plan. I always do, Jumpy.”

“Plans that hinge on my coming through without ever knowing what I’m supposed to do, usually,” He joked, “Luckily, it’s just Christmas Dinner this time. Not a matter of life and death.”

“This plan doesn’t hinge on you at all! And it’s not true that my plans always hinge on you cluelessly doing exactly what I want you to. Sometimes that burden falls on Sigma Klim,” She chuckled, “But he doesn’t even get the benefit of a lifetime of rewards from me! Not even a single minute. After all, even if you didn’t remember it, you and I were engaged in that timeline… So I probably hold the world record of most faithful wife ever!”

“Not quite. After all, we aren’t married yet!” Junpei joked back, wrapping his arms around her shoulders, “Because you didn’t want a cold wedding.”

“Who would want to get married in November?” Akane questioned, turning to look at him, “Spring is a lovely time. Beautiful, and a great temperature…”

“Though, we did have some of our best early flirtations while locked in a freezer…” Junpei noted.

“Yes, and I also discovered your disembodied head in another freezer, so what’s your point? I don’t want to get married in winter!” She chuckled.

“Okay, I get it. Same reason I don’t want to get married during a heatwave,” Junpei rolled his eyes, “Too reminiscent of one of the many ways we’ve been separated by death.”

“Oh, that reminds me…” Akane pulled away, holding a finger to her chin, “Aoi and I always had this tradition, we’d open one gift on Christmas Eve then the rest on Christmas day. So could I give you one of your gifts early?”

“I don’t get how that reminded you, but I’m not opposed to the idea. I’ll give you one of yours early too,” Junpei nodded, scratching his head as he watched Akane pick up a small box from under the tree, giggling to herself.

“Okay Jumpy,” She got out between laughter, “You’ve been a very naughty boy this year,” She approached him and held out the box, “And I’ll offer you, my body,” She couldn’t keep a straight face as he took the box from her with a confused look. He opened it, then just turned and gave her a deadpan look.

“Coal? Really?” He questioned, stifling laughter himself.

“Oh no, coal is created when organic matter decomposes for a long time. This is a charcoal briquette, which is made when organic matter burns up!” She explained, her laughter turning to a guffaw, “Get it? My body?”

“Akane, this joke is in terrible taste!” Junpei snickered, then burst out laughing as well, “So it shouldn’t be this hilarious!”

“We can laugh about my trauma if I say it’s okay to, and I do!” Akane’s laughter eventually trailed off and she just grinned at Junpei, “I’ve been waiting for an opportunity to use that joke on you since the second nonary game…”

“So a year and a half, but basically an eternity… You sure are one committed comedian,” Junpei’s laughter dissipated as well, and he caught himself just staring at Akane. Staring at… her face. Her smile, the lack of which had made him so bitter, and now they were laughing at something so morbid, and they were together. Living together, going to get married… It was almost too good to be true, but if it was the only timeline where this could happen, then Junpei was by far the luckiest man on Earth after all. As much as a non sequitur as it was, he couldn’t help but voice this, “…God, I love you.”

“I love you too, Jumpy!” She responded, her smile softening as well when she stepped closer to him, “I just…” She took a deep breath, then stepped forward and wrapped him in the tightest hug she could muster, “I’ve waited so long, to be able… To hold you like this anytime. To be close to you… And I’m sorry. Sorry to all of the timelines that I abandoned… you.”

“That’s all in the past now,” Junpei shook his head, then chuckled again, “Well… past, paralell, and future, but none of it’s relevant to us. Here and now. All those other memories are just like… a bad dream,” He shrugged, “Besides, it’s not like the bitter old man version of me ever jumped back here, so all I know about that timeline is what you’ve told me!”

“You were still charming, in your own right,” Akane noted, “But I think that it would be a nice goal for me, to make sure that you didn’t become so grumpy in your old age this time around!”

“That’s quite the task, Kanny,” Junpei answered, planting a soft kiss on her forehead, “I mean, it did only take a year without you to turn me into a nihilist. After weathering the years of life, well, I’m not sure even the best woman ever to grace this planet can keep me from getting at least a little grouchy when I start to get decrepit.”

“Well if she can’t do it, I guess I don’t stand a chance!” Akane teased, looking up at him with a goofy grin, “But, I love you when you’re grouchy anyway. As long as you don’t get as emo as you were right at the beginning of the decision game, that is… If you start talking about the lack of meaning our futile existences hold again, I just might have to disappear without a trace for another decade!”

“Did I really say that? Doesn’t quite sound like me. You sure you’re not the emo one, Kanny?” Junpei joked, then pulled away from the tight hug but didn’t let go of her, “Hey, what was that Shakespeare thing? True love’s a shitty river, but it works out?”

“The course of true love never did run smooth,” Akane gave him the proper statement, “Which I guess could be a river, but you know what it could also be?” She questioned, looking him in the eyes with a small smile, “A branching timeline. One that eventually, always comes back to this. You and I. It’s always been us… hasn’t it? All our lives… I always wanted to be with you, no matter where or when it was, or how disastrous… And I’m sorry I keep bringing this up, but there’s this nagging part of me that worries, that you don’t feel the same.”

“Kanny, I haven’t seen as many timelines as you. I haven’t seen as much death and destruction, and I haven’t waited for you as long as you’ve waited for me, not in the timelines which I can remember, but I…” He trailed off and sighed, “I searched for you. After the second nonary game, all I did was look for you, because I knew that very same thing. This is sappy as all get out, but I get the feeling that we were meant to be.”

“I do too…” Akane nodded with a content sigh, “It just seems too good to be true.”

“Well, we had a one in a million shot, of reaching a timeline like this, but we did it,” Junpei chuckled, then leaned down and picked up one of the other gifts from under the tree and held it out to her, “Here. Open one tonight. I don’t have anything clever like you did, but… Well, it’s the tradition of the thing, right?”

“Aw, thank you!” Akane grinned as she took the item, which was very shoddily wrapped, and squished in her hands. She pulled the paper off to discover that it was a stuffed toy, a rabbit with very soft fabric for fur. Her smile grew even more and her eyes lit up as she ran a hand over it, “You remembered my favorite animal…”

“That gift’s also a promise to you,” Junpei explained, tapping the toy’s head, “Once we’re all sorted out, less busy, really settled in, we’ll get our own rabbit hutch. And I’ll build a really strong fence around it, because even if I still can’t win a fight, that’ll keep them safe from any neighborhood kids who might decide to be dickwads!”

“Well, I don’t think that tends to happen often around here… It’s usually schoolyard rabbits that get targeted by hooligans, right? But…” She giggled, “We should protect them as best as we can anyway. I’d hate for you to get beat up again!”

“Of course,” Junpei nodded, then sighed with a grin, “…Merry Christmas, Kanny.”

“Merry Christmas, Jumpy.”

————–

There was one person who remembered the timeline in which the whole world died.

His name was Aoi Kurashiki, and he was one of the only survivors in that timeline, left alone in a destroyed world. He was never as strong an esper as his sister, but there were things which stuck in his mind, from time to time. Timelines where the second nonary game was a failure… but at least in those, there was something he knew for certain. He always knew that it was impermanent, in those timelines. He watched Akane die, over and over, but he always went back and there she was, ready to give it another college try.

This was different. This timeline, Aoi had no guarantee that anything would work out, that he’d escape this world in which he was alone. He kept trying, trying to get back, but it wasn’t working, and even if he did return he had no way of knowing if there would be anything he could change about it. Everyone was gone. Akane was gone. Aoi had never in his life been so absolutely alone.

He hadn’t seen one million Christmases; but he had seen quite a few.

None were quite as horrible as that one.

When Aoi woke up on Christmas day, it wasn’t. Wasn’t Christmas Day, that was. It was two days after Akane left for the Mars simulation. When Aoi went looking for her, he was turned away by a decrepit old man who seemed to stare right through him. All he could do was hope things would be different this time around…

And they were. They were different, and Akane was okay, and he was going to see her and Junpei for Christmas dinner tomorrow. Even so, that memory haunted him. He just couldn’t let go, despite all the joy in the air. One Christmas without her, without a promise of seeing her again. Was that the sort of burden she carried, in timelines where she outlived him?

“Merry Christmas!” She giggled to him, holding Junpei’s hand, “Santa!”

Blood Under the Bridge

To: @choco-maize

From: @hardcoreprince

Merry Christmas, choco-maize! The prompt was Klim family bonding (preferably with Kyle and Luna as well) so I did… this. I tried to make it as canon compliant as possible! Hope you enjoy! 

CHAPTER 1

He exhales.

Air is a heavy thing that presses around him. His eyes are glued shut, his lungs won’t contract. The panic kicks his mind into action. He needs to inhale. He needs to sit up.

“Kyle, calm down.”

The voice makes him pause for a moment. He knows that voice. He struggles towards it, ignoring the repeated pleas to calm down. It’s a woman. Or… a simulation of a woman.

“He’s fine. He should be fully functional in a moment.”

The second voice sends a chill through his body.

The second voice brings the world to a halt.

Kyle inhales.

He forces his eyes open. Everything is unfocused. The room is a muted gray and there’s a smear of clinical tools surrounding him, but his bleary eyes are only seeking one thing.

There, at the foot of his bed, the bed he now realizes he’s strapped down to, is someone wearing his own face. Someone he knows to be his father, 45 years younger.

“Welcome back, Kyle.”

The next few hours are a hazy blur. At times, Kyle is a passive third party, watching Luna nervously tend to his body. Other times, he’s angry and uncooperative. His voice is weak and hoarse and his tongue won’t form the words, but the anger drives him to keep trying to make contact with his father, who won’t even look away from his computer.

When the fog finally lifts, Kyle is calm. One moment he’s staring vacantly at the wall, and the next his mind is buzzing. He remembers being on Rhizome 9, remembers Luna coming to him, relaying a message from his father. Remembers the confusion, the hurt, the reluctance.

He remembers SHIFTing.

“Oh, Kyle!” Luna is at his side, peering into his eyes. They dart away from hers and she smiles. “How are you feeling? You should be able to speak now.”

He opens his mouth. “I’m… I’m fine,” he spits out. The voice coming from his mouth doesn’t feel like his. Nothing feels like his.

“Here.” Luna offers him some water from a straw, but Kyle painfully hauls himself up into a sitting position before he will accept it. His body is heavy, unwieldy.

Kyle swallows a mouthful of water, winces as the cold slides down his esophagus. “I want to talk to him.”

Luna’s eyebrows draw together. “Are you sure? I mean, maybe you should wait until you’ve recovered?”

Kyle nods, struggling to maintain his calm. He feels volatile, dangerous. “No. I won’t be staying that long.”

Luna worries at her bottom lip. “Alright.”

She hesitates for a moment before touching his shoulder gently, lovingly, and Kyle lets her. He’s not angry with her. He has stopped wasting his energy being angry with her. She’s a fancy toaster, a collection of gears and wires that his father has programmed to be kind to him. Programmed to show Kyle the love that his father never had for him.

After the Nonary Game, Kyle never expected to see his father again as he knew him. His body had been left behind, inhabited by a younger version of himself. The real Sigma had left to a better timeline and never looked back. Even though he claimed he was doing it for humanity, for the future of the planet, at his core, his father is selfish.

So when Luna approached him, just days after the Nonary Game, claiming that Sigma wanted to speak with him, Kyle knew Sigma had an ulterior motive. Still, he agreed. With her help, he SHIFTed into the past.

And now he’s here.

“Kyle.”

He looks up sharply, eyes narrowed and heart racing. Sigma is standing at his bedside, within range of his fists and there’s nothing to hold him back now.

But he doesn’t strike. His body is still weak and he has never been one for violence.

“Father.”

There’s a long silence. Kyle exhales.

“So I’m here. What do you want?”

Sigma crosses his arms over his chest. He’s wearing a lab coat that looks out of place on his younger self. “Nothing.”

Kyle furrows his brows. “What?”

Sigma regards him calmly, no hint of emotion. “I don’t want anything from you. I just wanted to bring you here, to this timeline.”

The words hit Kyle like a punch to the stomach. The air flees his lungs and he struggles to rearrange his face into something that’s not total shock. But his surprise is quickly replaced with suspicion. “Why?”

He wants something.

He always wants something.

Sigma’s eyebrows knit together. He looks almost wounded. Almost. Kyle can never tell with Sigma. “Because you’re my son. I thought… I thought maybe you could live here, with us.”

The anger rushes back into his blood.

“Really?” Kyle bites out. “Am I your son? I’m not just one of your toys? Like her?” He jabs a finger at Luna, who has been sitting quietly at Sigma’s computer. She stops typing for a moment, but doesn’t look over.

“Kyle–”

“No.” He can feel his heart floundering against his ribs. “You don’t get to call me your son. You can’t just expect me to be okay with… with this.” He gestures to his body, a body he knows was grown for him, a body that had it’s own mind, a mind that is now floating out in space, living in Kyle’s suit.

Sigma swallows. “I know what you’re thinking, believe me, I do.”

“Do you?” he spits. “Do you–”

Sigma holds up a hand and Kyle nearly explodes with rage. But he doesn’t. He inhales and waits for Sigma to continue.

“The other Kyle, the one who’s body you’re in, has never been conscious.”

A cold feeling settles into Kyle’s stomach. He opens his mouth but Sigma’s not done.

“He was grown here, never woken.”

“But did he have brain activity?”

“Yes.” Sigma’s eyebrows are furrowed again. “There had to be in order to SHIFT. Right now he’s on Rhizome 9 in cold sleep.”

His voice is clinical, even though his expression is troubled. He needs to work harder on his acting.

“And that’s okay with you?” Kyle asks. “Wait, don’t answer. I know that’s okay with you. You were fine to abandon your younger self to come here.”

Sigma opens his mouth, no doubt ready to spew more lies and excuses, but Kyle doesn’t want to hear it. “No, don’t. I know you feel something. That’s why you brought me here. You think this is going to make up for all those years on Rhizome 9. For all those timelines when you forced me to play that game.” Kyle’s voice has gotten louder. He can feel Luna looking at him now. She’s stopped typing.

“Well, it’s not alright. This doesn’t clear your conscious.” Kyle tries to push himself from the bed but he’s still too weak, too unused to the foreign limbs he’s inhabiting. Luna is at his side instantly, her gentle hands on his shoulders, guiding him back down.

He shakes her off. “I’m fine.” He exhales hard. Sigma meets his eyes and he doesn’t look away. “I’m done here. When the other Kyle comes back, wake him up and start fresh. Don’t let him know how much of a cold hearted bastard you are.”

Luna looks to Sigma, eyes sad and imploring, but Sigma doesn’t move.

“Kyle, please stay. Even if you don’t stay here with me, stay. I couldn’t bare it if you went back up there.”

Kyle laughs and it’s a hollow thing. He’s tempted to SHIFT right there, just to spite Sigma, just to imagine his reaction, but he resists. He has nothing back there, not even Akane. She lived in this timeline, sure, but he hasn’t spoken to her in months. Thinking about her still hurts.

There is nothing for him here either, but there are possibilities.

He’s on Earth.

It hits him all at once. Earth. Not even his father can ruin Earth.

“Fine.”

Sigma visibly relaxes.

“But not because I think you care about me. I’d believe this cares about me before you.” He jabs a finger at Luna and her face falls. He feels a pang of regret, and tries to remind himself that it’s all a simulation.

Still, her sad, wide eyes haunt his dreams.

CHAPTER 2

It’s a few days until Kyle is strong enough to leave the bed he’s been confined to. During this time he learns he’s in the basement of the house that Sigma shares with his wife and daughter. It’s only been two years since Sigma SHIFTed from the future and he’s wasted no time making a life. It makes Kyle nauseous thinking about it.

Kyle doesn’t want to meet the wife or the daughter, who is probably small and formless anyway. He makes it clear during his recovery that he’s going to leave the moment he is able. The only person he sees is Luna, who, as far as he can tell, is exactly the same Luna as the one who lived with him on Rhizome 9. He asks her about it idly and she tells him about quantum computers, but he really isn’t interested.

Despite his protests, Kyle is moved upstairs into the spare room. Luna insists he’ll be more comfortable there until he leaves, but he suspects that his father has put this idea in her head. Sigma is going to try to charm him with a room of his own.

Even though it’s an obvious ploy, Kyle accepts. He’s going to show his father he can’t be swayed.

Kyle tells Luna as much. The disappointment shows clear on her face. He thinks Sigma has programmed her to be sweeter and sadder than usual because lately all she does is tug at his heartstrings. He tries not to let it get to him.

The room he’s given is clean but sparse. There’s a bed and a night stand and a few bland pictures on the wall of landscapes of an Earth he’s never seen with his own eyes. It makes him even more eager to leave, or to at least go outside. But Luna has warned him he can’t leave until he gets the last round of immunizations. He openly wondered why his father hadn’t just given it to the body before Kyle arrived. Why he would try to keep Kyle hostage longer than necessary?

Luna had no comment for that one.

There’s a bookshelf in the corner but Kyle is too restless for reading. He wryly takes note of the fact that his father has not left him a computer. Sigma doesn’t trust him.

A knock at the door snaps him out of his thoughts. He narrows his eyes and takes a step toward the door.

“Who is it?”

“It’s me.”

Kyle thinks he recognizes the voice, the flat, measured tone, but he can’t place it. It triggers something in his brain, the muddled, confused feelings he gets whenever he thinks of that tangle of timelines where he was forced to play the Nonary Game.

Suddenly, he knows who it is.

“Phi?”

“Just open the door.”

And he does because he knows it’s her now. He’s never met her in this timeline, he hardly can make sense of other timelines, let alone follow one to the end, but he knows the person behind the door and he wants to know what the hell she’s doing here, in this time.

The person standing before him is a short woman with bleached white hair. She has glasses perched on the bridge of her nose and an amused expression. Everything about her feels familiar especially now that she’s a real person and not a mishmash of confusing memories.

Somehow, he trusts her.

“Damn, that’s creepy,” she says, crossing her arms over her chest. He squints at her and she gestures to his whole body. “You’re him.”

Kyle grimaces and Phi waves a hand apologetically. “Sorry, it’s just weird.” She brushes past him and perches at the edge of his bed. He stares after her, still feeling vaguely disoriented. The memories of the Nonary Game are washing over him. Timelines where they worked together. Timelines where they betrayed each other.

And yet…

“You have questions.”

Kyle comes back to himself. “Of course I do,” he mutters, feeling stupid for being so distracted. “First of all, what are you doing here?”

Phi pats the bed next to her and Kyle grows even more annoyed. This is his room. He instead pulls the chair from the corner up to the bed at takes a seat across from her.

“Suit yourself.” She watches him for another minute and he hates that she’s thinking of Sigma right now.

And then she tells him.

Some of it, he vaguely remembers, some of it, he’s sure he’s never heard before. She tells him about the timeline where she SHIFTed back to her body before it was put into cold storage, about how DCOM turned into another sick, twisted game. About how she was there with Sigma and Diana, who was now his wife.

“Are you ready for the next part? You need a drink or a piss first?”

Kyle blinks in the resulting silence. He’s been listening so intently that he didn’t realize he was being addressed. “I’m fine.”

“Well,” and here she hesitates, “during one timeline, I died. Most of us died. One of us escaped. And then Sigma and Diana were left in the bunker. Forever.”

Kyle nods. Savagely, he’s a little bit pleased that, somewhere, there’s a timeline where Sigma is just as isolated and alone as Kyle was. But then he thinks of Sigma dying slowly from starvation and feels guilty.

“Before they ran out of food, Diana gave birth.”

Kyle wants to know why this is important, why Phi knows this, but he keeps his mouth shut.

“Twins. A boy and a girl. Of course, they all weren’t going to survive down there, so they did the only thing they could.”

Though he tries not to make a face, Kyle winces visibly. He opens his mouth, to stop Phi from telling him a gruesome story, but she doesn’t stop.

“They sent the babies into the past. One of the babies grew up to be Delta, the one who arranged the whole game and was responsible for the death of 6 billion people in your timeline.”

Part of Kyle wants to laugh. Even though Phi is totally seriously, even though, somehow, he trusts her, the whole story has fallen apart.

“Okay,” Kyle says, skepticism apparent in his tone. “And how was that possible?”

Phi sighs and presses her glasses further up her nose. She tells him about a transporter. It sounds ridiculous and hardly makes sense, but when she finishes, she looks him straight in the eye and says, “I was the other baby.”

That knocks the breath from his lungs. Because when she says it, he believes her. When she says it, he feels something deep in his chest.

“So I’m your sister, I guess. And your daughter, kind of. Isn’t that messed up?” Her eyebrows are raised and there’s a little smirk on her lips, but he can see she’s nervous.

And then Kyle actually laughs. His shoulders shake and he covers his face with his hands. It’s wild and ridiculous and joyless and he can’t stop.

When he finally quiets, Phi is looking at him with a little concern, but she’s smiling. “Yeah, yeah, I know. You want to know what else is fucked up?”

Kyle coughs out another laugh. “There’s more?”

“Oh yeah.” Phi grins. “Guess who Luna looks EXACTLY like.”

There’s a moment of silence before Kyle says, “You’re kidding.”

“Wish I was,” Phi says, pushing some hair from her eyes. “That Sigma is one screwed up bastard.”

And at that, Kyle smiles. He can’t remember the last time he smiled.

“You should meet Diana, you’ll like her. And I’m not just saying that because she’s my mom.”

Instantly, the good feelings drain out of Kyle. He’s on the alert. This has been a trick. Sigma sent Phi in to break him down, make him feel at ease, convince him not to leave. He can’t believe he’s been so stupid, trusted so easily.

“No,” he says sharply, getting to his feet. Phi doesn’t move. She just watches him mildly. “I know what you’re trying to do. He sent you.”

Phi snorts. “Uh, no. He didn’t even want me to see you. He was just gonna let you go. Which, I guess, he thinks is his way of saying he loves you or something. You know, by letting you do your own thing. I guess it’s sweet. I just wanted to see you and fill you in on what he obviously didn’t tell you.”

For a moment Kyle is outraged that Sigma was just going to let him out into the world without telling him anything. Not telling him about his sister.

His sister.

He looks at Phi with new eyes, tries to find the bits of himself in her. She watches him evenly, as if she knows what he’s doing.

“You can go if you want. But you don’t know the first thing about Earth. I know you think you do, but trust me, you don’t.”

It’s a fair point. And, if he leaves, he won’t even have a pretend person to talk to. If he leaves, he’s truly alone.

“But if you stick around, I can help you. Hell, maybe I’ll even go with you.”

Even though he can’t help but feel trapped, even though he wants to be a thousand miles away from his father, Kyle finds himself nodding. He trusts her. Against his better judgment, he trusts her.

“Okay… okay.”

CHAPTER 3

Kyle doesn’t meet Diana right away. Partly because he feels awkward leaving his room, feels too exposed even slipping down the hall to use the bathroom. Instead, he spends a lot of time staring at the same page in a book he’s picked up off the shelf.

Phi has replaced Luna in checking up on him. Her bedside manner is, frankly, atrocious, and he tells himself that’s the only reason he misses Luna. It’s strange and unwelcome, but he does. He’s lived with her for years and a day without seeing her unbalances him, makes him think about the future.

A future she won’t be in.

The thought shouldn’t trouble him, but it does. She’s not his mother, she will never be his mother, she’ll never even be a person, but the thought of never seeing her again still hurts.

The door opens. It’s been nearly 24 hours since Phi first visited and already she’s decided she doesn’t need to knock.

“Cool, still here, still alive,” she says by way of greeting. “Listen, Diana made dinner and wants to know if you want to come eat with us. I thought maaaybe you’d want to because Sigma’s not here.”

It’s only dinner, but the whole notion makes him feel small and stupid and vulnerable. He can’t help but think that Sigma has set this up. That Sigma remembered his childish desire for a family who eats dinner together and set this whole thing up. It was foolish and sentimental and goddamnit Kyle isn’t going to get upset.

“No, I’m fine,” Kyle says, keeping his tone measured and even.

Phi must see something in his expression because she shrugs a bit too casually. “Okay. I’ll have her bring something in after, if that’s okay? I mean, I can’t keep being your slave forever.”

Kyle swallows. He still doesn’t really want to meet Diana, but this is as good a time as any, he figures. “Sure.”

Less than an hour later, there’s a knock at the door and Kyle tenses. He gets up from his bed, letting the book he’d been staring at fall away, and moves to open the door.

The resemblance is striking, but what hits him most is Diana’s clear blue eyes that are the same exact eyes that he’s been scorning since he was kid. Her appearance makes him pause, makes his chest twinge.

“Hi,” she says brightly. Her voice even sounds similar. “I’m Diana. I brought you something.”

Only now does he look at what she’s holding. It’s a tray with a bowl of soup perched on it that looks warm and smells better than anything he’s ever eaten.

“Oh.” He struggles to form words. “Um, thank you.” His hands automatically reach for the tray, but he’s still staring at her.

Unwelcome thoughts flood his mind. He can’t help but picture growing up with her, having a normal life, having a father who loved him…

But then he thinks about Akane, who had given him everything he ever wanted and then betrayed him. How can he trust Diana and Phi so easily? He can’t. He needs to keep his guard up. But he has to push his thoughts away because Diana is still standing there and he’s very aware that he must look like a fool.

“It’s chicken soup. I hope that’s okay,” Diana says. She’s smiling but there’s a nervous quirk to her eyebrows, an expression he’s seen on Luna many times. The level of detail that went into Luna is almost sick. Something happened to Diana in another timeline. And Sigma never got over it.

“It’s fine,” Kyle says, still running on autopilot.

Diana hesitates for a moment. “It’s nice to finally meet you. Sigma always talks about you.”

Kyle’s hands get tighter around the tray.

“He’s proud of you.”

He exhales hard, he feels his hands shaking. “For what?”

She reaches out and touches his shoulder, exactly the way Luna always does.

“For being here.”

Their brief meeting keeps Kyle awake at night.

He can’t remember the last time he felt that way. Felt loved. Loved by someone he’s barely just met. He can’t help but think of Akane and the stories she would tell, the way she would make him laugh, the way she could just sit in the same room without saying anything and make him feel loved. He misses her. He misses her so much that he wants to SHIFT back and see her. But he can’t.

Kyle had woken from cold sleep, disoriented and weak and full of intrusive memories of a game he’d never played, to find that Akane had vanished.

It nagged at him, no matter how much he tried to tell himself he didn’t care. Akane had already betrayed him. Her disappearance meant nothing to him. She left him, just like his father had.

There’s one person who’s never left him.

Sleep seems far off. It’s two in the morning and he doesn’t feel tired. Kyle slides out of bed and slips into the hallway. It’s dark and he’s instantly disoriented. He doesn’t even know where he’s going. The whole thing seems stupid now. He wants to see Luna. After years of rolling his eyes at her, years of denying her sentience, he wants to talk to her.

“Kyle?”

Her voice startles him. He turns towards the source and there’s Luna, standing at the end of the hallway. She steps towards him and Kyle ushers her into his room.

He turns the lights on, like he should have done earlier, illuminating Luna’s worried features.

“Do you need something?” She asks, rearranging her face into something that looks more mild.

Kyle shakes his head. “I…,” he pauses for a second, narrows his eyes. “What were you doing in the hallway? How did you know it was me?”

She looks sheepish. “I… Listen, please don’t be mad. All the doors have electronic locks, right?”

He nods, waiting for her to continue. He hasn’t locked his door since Phi started letting herself in.

“Well, that means the main computer knows when doors are opened or closed. Normally I don’t pay attention but… I’ve been monitoring your door. Please don’t tell Sigma. He told me to give you space.”

Even though the look on her face and the sincerity in her voice are a simulation, Kyle feels his stomach drop.

“I won’t tell him,” he says. “But, why?”

He thinks he knows. He thinks he knows but he wants to hear her explanation.

Luna takes a deep breath she doesn’t need. “I’m worried about you. I’m afraid you’ll leave without saying anything. That’s why…,” her voice breaks, “I haven’t given you the last injection yet.”

Kyle blinks.

“I’m sorry. It was me. I told Sigma I already gave it you. I logged it in the system. But I still have it. I was going to give it to you tomorrow, I promise. I just… I wanted you to meet your family. I wanted them to give you what I never could.”

It’s a simulation. It’s a simulation. It’s not real. It’s not–

The tears build at the corners of Kyle’s eyes. His chest is tight and he can’t look at Luna anymore. He grits his teeth and roughly wipes his eyes. He tries to formulate some kind of response but Luna touches him so gently on the shoulder.

Kyle can’t remember the last time he cried.

He feels everything at once. The grief of losing Akane, the swirl of an endless number of timelines, the love that Luna has for him. It all pours out of him as Luna wraps her arms around him. And he lets her. He pulls her in and cries into her shoulder like a child.

It’s ugly and gasping but he needs to say something to her. “I’m sorry,” he mumbles wetly. “I’m sorry.”

She rubs small circles into his back. He can feel her shaking.

When they finally pull away, Kyle feels tired and drained but one look at Luna makes the corners of his mouth twitch into a smile.

She’s beaming at him. Her eyebrows are knitted together and her lips are trembling, but she’s positively glowing. It’s enough to make Kyle want to cry again, but he pushes back the emotion.

Even though his father has created her, even though she’s nothing more than a database of responses, for once, Kyle can see past that. For once, he’s made her happy.

And it feels real enough.

CHAPTER 4

Luna gives Kyle the last booster shot first thing in the morning. It feels important, final. With this he can walk out the door. With this, he can leave and never look back.

The pull to leave is still there but now it doesn’t feel as urgent.

“Luna,” he says as she dabs a cotton ball over the tiny hole in his arm. They’re down in Sigma’s lab and Sigma himself is nowhere to be seen. “I want…” He closes his eyes for a long moment. “I want us to eat dinner together. All of us.”

A smile breaks out across her face. “Of course.”

It’s not a spur of the moment suggestion. He has been thinking about it since last night. He still doesn’t trust his father, hasn’t forgiven him, but at this point he’s at least willing to speak with him.

It’s 10:23 when Kyle takes his first step outside.

He had passed on Phi’s offer for company but accepted the coat and shoes Luna thrust into his arms. He’s glad of it as he steps out into the garden and the cold air stings his cheeks.

It’s winter but the garden is alive with flowers. It reminds him of the garden on Rhizome 9, but more beautiful because he’s actually outside.

For a moment he hesitates just outside the door, feet glued to the cement patio as he takes in the whites and yellows and blues. Some of the flowers he recognizes, some of them are as foreign as the bird perched on the bench. He takes a step towards it. He’s seen pictures of birds, videos of birds, but this is the first time he’s seen a living creature other than a human.

It’s a tiny brown sparrow that chirps at him before taking to the sky. He watches it go, transfixed before he settles into the bench.

The air is cold in his lungs. He’s never felt cold like this. His body temperature had always been regulated by his suit. He used to hate his suit, but without it he’s vulnerable.

There are footsteps on the cement path behind Kyle. He doesn’t turn around, assuming it’s Phi.

But when the person sits down on the bench next to him, he knows it’s not her.

It’s Sigma.

Kyle tenses and sets his jaw before turning to look at his father. He can’t read his expression. He never could. He wants him to say something, to speak first. But he doesn’t. They sit there until the silence is unbearable.

“What are you doing here?” Kyle asks. He doesn’t look at Sigma. He keeps his eyes trained on the fence surrounding the garden. Another sparrow has perched there.

“I just wanted to tell you that I’m sorry. For everything. I know you think I’m a monster, and I don’t blame you. I have done bad things, Kyle, things I’m not proud of in the name of good. I don’t expect you to forget everything I’ve done, but I just want you to know…” Sigma trails off. Kyle looks at him out of the corner of his eye and he can see Sigma wringing his hands.

He lets the moment linger, lets Sigma become increasingly more uncomfortable.

“I want you to know that you are loved.”

Never in his life has Sigma told Kyle he loves him.

Kyle doesn’t know how to process it. His first instinct is that it’s a farce, another ploy for Sigma to make him stay. But hasn’t he thought that all along? Hasn’t he been told again and again that Sigma wants Kyle to do what makes him happy? There’s a small, conspiratorial part of him that says Sigma has orchestrated this whole thing, has manipulated every member of his family into making Kyle stay.

Not even Sigma would go to that trouble.

“I understand,” Kyle says, because he knows he has to say something. It’s not the emotional understanding he came to with Luna, not even forgiveness. It’s a placeholder while Kyle attempts to make sense of everything.

“Okay.” Sigma gets up and Kyle is glad for it. Neither of them are very good at this. “I’ll see you at dinner?”

Kyle nods and watches his father walk away with mixed feelings. He wants to feel angry, to shout after Sigma, to ask how dare he say such things now after a lifetime of neglect. But the anger has gone. Just like he’s stopped being angry with Luna for not being what he wanted her to be, he’s stopped being angry with his father for not living up to his expectations.

In that way, Luna and his father are the same. Luna has been programmed to act a certain way and draws her responses from a database. On Rhizome 9 Sigma was working towards something that Akane had already seen, something that always had to happen. His responses were limited to things that would produce the desired outcome.

Kyle understands and, one day, he will forgive.

“I can’t believe you spent like five hours outside in the cold,” Phi says over dinner.

Kyle’s sitting next to her with Diana directly across from him. Sigma is next to Diana with Luna on her other side. Luna, of course, doesn’t need to eat, but it wouldn’t feel right without her.

“It was only an hour,” Kyle replies, realizing too late that Phi is teasing him.

As Phi snickers, Sigma looks down at his phone. He mutters something to himself as he pushes his chair out from the table. “Continue without me, I’ll be right back.”

Kyle stares after him before looking to Phi. She shrugs as she shovels a forkful of salad into her mouth. Apparently Diana and Luna know what Sigma is doing, because they both look away when Kyle looks to them.

“Sorry I’m late.”

Standing in the doorway is a woman who Kyle would recognize anywhere. She’s so much younger than Kyle has ever seen her, but he knows exactly who she is.

“Akane.”

Kyle is standing before he consciously thinks to do it. His body takes him over to her, a woman who has never met him, a woman who meant so much to him in another timeline.

“Kyle.”

She hugs him and he lets her. He hesitates a moment before wrapping his arms around her. His chest feels tight as she leans up on her toes and whispers in his ear.“It’s been a long time. I’m glad you’re here.”

Dinner is everything Kyle has always wanted it to be.

Phi continues to tease him, which makes Diana laugh. Luna watches him from the corners of her eyes, even when speaking to others. It doesn’t annoy him like it used to. Sigma starts telling Akane about a project he’s working on, but Akane tells him not to discuss work at the dinner table.

Leaving doesn’t seem so urgent anymore. Earth can wait awhile longer because for the first time in a long time, Kyle is happy right where he is.

Happy Holidays thefireinthewire!

To: @thefireinthewire

From: @epobbp

Hi! I was your Zecret Santa ^.^ You had some fun prompts for me to decide on but I went with Light and Aoi during the VLR timeline. I hope you enjoy it and have a fantastic holiday and new year ^.^

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Light heard a familiar voice. The last time he heard it was when they were trapped on a boat together.

“To what do I owe this pleasure, Aoi? Come to kidnap me also?” Light’s voice was falsely friendly. He had no proof that Aoi was part of Clover’s most recent kidnapping but it would not surprise him if he was. Clover had been missing for over 6 months now and not once had she tried to contact him through the morphogenetic fields or any other way. There were multiple things this could indicate: A. She is out of range for contact. Which he felt was unlikely, especially when taken into account that the training obtained since joining SOIS had improved his range even farther than what it was during the Nonary Game. B. She is unable to contact him but she’s alive, whether it be due to being knocked out or drugged. Or worse case scenario C, she had died, either in the reactor explosions earlier this year, as one of the many victims of Radical-6 before that, or from her kidnappers, of which one was possibly here.

 Aoi just sighed. “Look Light. I know you think I took your sister.” Light was right, but he didn’t need to know that. “I might know of a way to get her back. If you want to help out.”

“A way to get her back you say? How?” Light could tell that Aoi was not telling him everything. Why would he be looking for a way to get Clover back? If Aoi is involved in this, that meant Akane would be to, Light had no doubts about that. Which brings the question of what are they looking for, and how does Clover play in.

“Akane told me about this device called a transporter. If we can get it, we can get your sister back.”

“A transporter?” Light raised an eyebrow at Aoi. Aoi let of a groan of frustration.

“I don’t know okay. I heard about it from Akane. Using it would be a way to get Clover back from what I’ve heard about it. I figured you would want the chance to find her.” The last sentence he muttered to himself, but Light heard it anyway.

Light considered this for a moment. He could potentially be walking into a trap. However, apocalypse had happened and it was incredibly different to get food and water. He had previously been working with SOIS, but after the explosion, everyone was too focused on getting food and staying alive to actually care about what had happened to Alice and Clover. Some of them had even said they are probably in a better place because they don’t need to deal with this hell. Working with Aoi might be the only chance he had for seeing his sister again. Why they needed this “transporter” was another matter entirely. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

They had been searching for months now, and all leads had turned out dead. It was hard enough finding enough food and water in this hellscape, but they were managing. They had found a place to make camp in and had cooked the food they had found.

They were eating in silence when Light turned his head to the left. “I believe I hear Junpei approaching.” His voice was mildly surprised. He didn’t think it would be likely to run into people he knew as they were looking. However, if Junpei was still looking for Akane, then he guessed it would only make sense for him to find Light and Akane’s brother eventually.

Aoi stood up quickly, making sure to take the food with him as they couldn’t risk wasting anything. “Shit. Shit. Shit. Shit.” Light waited one eyebrow raised. Aoi looked around for a place to hide. “Wait, which direction is he coming from?” Light pointed, still waiting for him to explain. Spotting something that would conceal him from Junpei’s view as he approached, Aoi spoke to Light as he ran over to it, “Don’t let him know I’m here. He cannot know that I’m here. But see what info he might have. Akane said he joined a detective agency so who knows what they could know.”

Light’s hearing was still incredible. Aoi was able to hide and finish his food before Junpei appeared.

“Snake??? What… You survived! Are you alone?” Junpei looked around. Aoi ducked his head, making sure Junpei couldn’t see him.

“It’s good to know you survived also Junpei. I am not alone, but…my companion had to leave momentarily. I do not know when to expect him back.”

“Your companion? Wait,’him’? You mean it’s not Clover? I would have thought you’d be together.” Junpei then noticed that Light had tensed up at the mention of his sister.

“Wait…Is she dead? Oh man I am so sorry, Light. Did she die from Radical-6? Or the explosions?” Junpei’s voice was laced with concern.

Pain radiated from Light’s face. “No. No. I do not believe she died from Radical-6 or the explosions. In fact she went missing on December 22th, 2028, before the outbreak.”

“Oh…well at least there’s hope right? She could still be out there looking for you too…” His expression showed how likely he thought this was, but he tried to keep his voice optimistic.

Light nodded. “Yes. We have actually had some leads as to where she might be. Have you heard of a device called a transporter? We believe that those who have taken Clover have obtained this device as well or that it could be used to help locate her.”

Junpei frowned, a headache suddenly starting. A transporter sounded very familiar to him, but he couldn’t remember why. There was the gap in his memory during the Mars Mission. Could he had heard of it during that time?

Junpei shook his head. “Sorry Light. I don’t know about it, but I’ll keep an ear out for it and let you know if I find anything. If I can find you anyway.”

“It is appreciated Junpei.”

Junpei stayed and visited, but fortunately for Aoi, it was only for a few hours. He eventually excused himself, saying that he was still looking for Akane and was following some leads he had gotten from some of the other survivors.

Aoi returned from his hiding spot.

“Is there some reason why Junpei cannot find you? I assume it has to do with Akane?”

Aoi’s silence said it all.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Periodically, they would find their way to one of the Crash Keys hideouts. Aoi would check to see if there were any new rumors about the location of the transporter and ask about his sister. To his joy, his sister was at this particular site.

They could not be in the same room together. Aoi had been on the outside for long enough that it was a concern that a mutation or new strain of Radical-6 could have infected him and he would not risk his sister. They both knew that Akane should be fine for the next 42 years or so, but neither wanted to risk the plan failing.

Still, he would be able to see his sister again. To know she was alright. He would forever be grateful to Junpei for saving her. But he would not go against her determination to keep to the plan, even at the cost of Junpei. Before he left to recruit Light, he saw her ring and knew the meaning behind it. He dearly loved his sister, but this was not a wish he would be able to grant for her and Junpei.

He heard the leads she had for them this time and reported the failed ones to her. She knew he (really Light) had been meeting up with Junpei from time to time, but never once did she ask about him. When he had told her that they had come across Junpei and that he was assisting them in trying to locate the transporter, her face went through a range of emotions: happiness, grief, and determination. All she had told him was to make sure that Junpei did not see him. They both knew he would survive the years until the Ambidex game, but he could not remember what happened at DCOM.

“How are things on Rhizome-9?” Aoi wanted to be kept up to date as much as possible on the plans.

Akane was quiet for a long moment. “Diana died. She was not able to adjust fully to the moon like Sigma has. He’s taking it hard. But she got her wish to go to the moon, and they had three happy years together.”

Aoi had nothing to say to that.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

“Here.”

Junpei placed an object in Light’s hand.

“What’s this? An old walkie talkie?”

“Yeah. We found these a while ago. I was able to get them to work again. At least it worked when Carlos and I tested them…They don’t have a long range. But I can’t think of any other way to get into contact with you when we find something.”

“Carlos?”

“Huh? Oh yeah…I guess you can say he’s a friend of mine?” There was an odd tone to Junpei’s voice.

“Are you sure you can trust him?”

“Hmmm? Oh yeah. At least I think so anyway…” Junpei trailed off, trying to figure out how to explain. He sighed. “I was involved with a simulated Mars mission, it was a lead I had on Akane. The first one I found. I met Carlos during that time, but I have no idea what happened there. My memories from that time are pretty much gone, and Carlos said he was sworn not to discuss it, no matter how much I asked. It’s complicated.”

Light nodded, unwilling to pry further into the subject.

“Anyway. I’m glad I found you. We’ve been trying for a while now. I’ll let you know if I have anything else. We’re headed south. You?”

“We haven’t discussed it yet. I believe we need to make a stop somewhere for my companion, however.”

“Well. Stay safe you two. Things are starting to get better, but it’s far from over yet.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Aoi and Light were supposed to meet Junpei at this spot. However, Light had gotten ill off of some of the…”food” they had to eat and this was possibly the best lead they have gotten in all these years. Junpei had contacted him over those walkie-talkies. They weren’t the best, but if they were close enough together, they could communicate and find a place to meet. Aoi wouldn’t risk not getting this information, so he wore a scarf and hat he had traded for a few months ago and went to the meeting spot.

The man who approached was not Junpei. He was muscular and had old burn scars on his arms. It was impossible to tell if it was before or after the antimatter plant explosions.

“Who are you?” Aoi spoke first, regarding the man warily.

“I could ask you the same question.” The man returned his gaze. “The man I’m here to meet is not you.”

“How would you know?”

“Well for one thing, you saw me approach.” Shit. Well, it’s not like Aoi was pretending to be Light, he just didn’t want to be discovered by Junpei.

“He’s sick, but has a message.” Over the years, they had come up with codes and other security measures to prevent the information from being heard by others.

“Very well. Here.” Carlos handed over a piece of paper written in braille. Another security measure that Junpei and Light (and Aoi) had agreed upon to prevent others from seeing the message.

Aoi nodded, unsurprised at the braille and turned around headed back towards where he left Light.

Unbeknownst to Aoi, the man followed. He was still suspicious and wanted to make sure that the letter actually arrived to its intended person.

Upon hearing the footsteps he recognized as Aoi, Light sat up.

“Ah, Aoi.” His voice was still a little weak, but stronger than it had been. “I trust there were no problems? Junpei did not recognize you?”

“Nope. It was some blond guy instead. Here’s the message. Is it actually from him?”

The message was placed in Light’s hand. He nodded. “Yes the correct code is there. This is a message from Junpei.”

Upon confirmation that the message was safely delivered, Carlos left to return to Junpei.

Aoi…the name sounded familiar to Carlos, but he couldn’t think of why.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It had been a long time since they started searching for Clover. All that time, and still no luck in finding his sister. His hope and faith were beginning to waver. Aoi was convinced that the transporter (that he had begun to doubt the existence of) was in this lead that Light had gotten from Junpei. There was a flash of recognition in Junpei’s eyes every time they brought up the transporter, but he always frowned and as far as Aoi could tell, he never could place why. (Aoi knew Akane was conflicted about this. Junpei was not allowed to remember what had happened in 2028. He could not remember for them to have a chance at changing it.)

The building was an old warehouse. A suspicious location to be sure but every lead they received had to be checked, and Junpei had participated in multiple raids on Free the Soul locations before the antimatter plants went off, so he might be able to tell how likely a location it was for them.

Aoi had an idea of what the transporter looked like and how it worked from Akane. The only reason she was alive now was because of this transporter, and it was Light’s only chance on being reunited with his sister unless he wanted to wait until after the Ambidex Game, if he lived that long.

They snuck in, it was suspiciously easy. They had gotten a lot of practice over the years, but if the transporter truly was here, there was not enough security for such an important item. Aoi was leaning towards calling it another false lead when a voice spoke out from behind them.

“I see you’ve arrived.” Aoi pulled out the gun Junpei had helped him fix (well, helped Light fix for his “companion”) and turned to face the voice that had spoken. He was very old, with purple eyes and a pair of orange glasses in his hands.

“There is no need for that. You have come for the transporter. It is here. You can use it for your intended purpose, but you cannot have it yet. You will not obtain it for many years yet.”

“What the hell do you mean? We’re here now and we’ll take it.” Aoi was about to pull the trigger on the old man. In this hell on earth, it was survival. However he was not able to, instead his hand let go on its own.

“What the f-”

“No you will not.”

The man turned and lead them down to a secret room hidden in the warehouse.

“By the time your reinforcements get here, this will be gone. Tell Akane Kurashiki: The date and time are April 18th, at 2:20 am.” The man turned and began to leave the room.

“Why are you helping us?” Light spoke up for the first time. The man paused and spoke four words before he left.

“My motives are…complex.”

“What the fuck does that mean?” were going to be the next words out of Aoi’s mouth but then the machine started up. He had been so focused on the man, that he hadn’t looked around. The machine was huge: two green pods with a screen between them on one side, two caccoon looking silver pods with yellow…doors he guessed… in the center on the other, with silver and gold silos behind them. The pods were glowing, with small beams of white lights surrounding them as if it was in a tornado. The light became blinding.

When Aoi could see again, he watched the pod doors (he was right) open to a bright light. From inside the light, two figured walked out and headed down the stairs in front of the pods. Aoi recognized both of them. He had played a part in their original kidnapping after all. They looked exactly as they had the day he kidnapped them.

Light heard the footsteps. He recognized the gait and the way she gasped, no matter how much time had passed.

“Clover!” All that time, combating despair, almost falling multiple times and she was here. Alive.

“Light!? Is it really you?” She ran towards her brother and hugged him. “I thought I’d never see you again. I thought this would never work but it did! You’re here! I’m here!”

Alice, who had emerged from the other pod stared for a few minutes at Light. She noticed what Clover had not yet realized in her happiness at seeing her brother. She looked to Aoi who turned his gaze away from the siblings and looked at her with a raised eyebrow.

“What year is this?”

He answered her and she nodded, having expected as much.

That was all they got to say when a white gas filled the room, knocking them all out.

When they came to, they were in the same location, but the transporter was gone.

Internally cursing himself and his stupidity, Aoi faced his companions. “Well come on then. We have to get you all to Akane. There is a lot of explaining to do.”

“WHAT? You mean we have to go back to her? Why! She told us that we would be able to return. She promised!”

“Hey, I have no idea why she told you that. What I was told is that if I found you, you need to go see her. Something about rules for not disturbing this timeline. You know that you’re in cold sleep on the moon right now. Also, Junpei can’t meet either of you, ever. As far as he’s aware, you both went missing years ago and it needs to stay that way.”

Shit. He hadn’t told Light that he knew where they were the entire time had he? He glanced quickly at Light, who showed no surprise at all that Aoi had known (figures), before motioning for them all to follow and left the warehouse.

He would still need to continue on to find the transporter alone, but at least Light had his sister back.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Bonus: After Carlos met back up with Junpei:

“So, you met Light. Interesting guy right?” Junpei was sitting in the middle of the deserted building trying to figure out what was wrong with the walkie-talkies.

“No, he was sick. So his friend was there instead. Some guy named Aoi I believe.”

Junpei stopped what he was doing the second he heard Aoi.

“His companion’s name was Aoi? You’re sure?”

Carlos was confused as to why Junpei looked so shocked at Aoi’s name. “Yeah, and don’t worry, I confirmed multiple ways that it was actually Light to whom he was returning to.”

“No, but…Aoi….white hair? Kind of a jerk?”

“Sure, that sounds about right I’d say.”

“GOD FUCKING DAMN IT LIGHT. The next time I see him I am killing him. Did you hear which way they were heading next? We need to follow them.”

Needless to say, Carlos was confused.  

Thanksgiving

To: @misstooni

From: @queenofdragons6

I got this idea around Thanksgiving, so that’s why it’s a Thanksgiving fic. “ZTD Team D/family heartwarming moment (post realizing they’re a family)” is the prompt I chose.

AO3 link

Phi honestly wasn’t sure what she had been expecting when she had agreed to spend Thanksgiving with Sigma’s family, but she sure didn’t expect to be standing in front of a surprisingly large house holding a Tupperware container with something Diana had made inside it. Well, more the size of house than holding the Tupperware.

The three of them walked up to the front door, Sigma taking the lead. Right when Phi started to wonder if coming along was a bad idea, the door opened to reveal a man Phi recognized as Sigma’s uncle.

“Heya, Siggy!” the man jovially yelled with a wide smile.

“Hey,” Sigma replied.

The man’s smile vanished the moment he saw Phi. Not looking away from her, he said to Sigma, “Uh, non-relatives aren’t-“

“I made an exception for her!” a woman called from inside the house.

Almost immediately afterwards, the owner of the voice appeared in the doorway: Sigma’s mother.

Breathless and smiling widely, the woman motioned for them to come in.

Inside the house were at least 15 other people, and Phi was sure that more were coming. Most of them immediately greeted Sigma and Diana, but nobody said anything to Phi. Several people gave her confused looks and a few of the kids waved, but nobody said anything.

Understandable, given what they believed of her.

Phi held up the Tupperware container. “What do I-?”

“I’ll take that, dear,” Sigma’s mother said as she took the container out of Phi’s hands and went into the kitchen.

Phi stood there awkwardly, unsure of what to do. It didn’t feel right to just try talking to someone, especially when she technically shouldn’t have been there.

“Hey! Give that back!”

Two children suddenly ran past Phi, one holding up what looked like a toy. They ran up the set of stairs leading to the second floor, and an adult went up after them. Phi stared after them, half-tempted to follow.

“So…” a man’s voice said.

Phi gave a start and turned to look at whoever had spoken to her. It was a man she recognized as another of Sigma’s uncles.

“You…” the man slurred, “…look familiar.”

The man gave all the impression of being drunk, but Phi knew that he probably wasn’t. “The Fourth of July, remember?”

The man stared at her for a few moments before his eyes lit up with recognition. “Oh yeah. Uh…Fi?”

“Phi.”

“Right. Still don’t have anyone else to celebrate with?”

Phi had met Sigma’s family for the first time on the Fourth of July earlier in the year. The original plan was to introduce her to them as Diana’s sister, but the unexpected appearance of Diana’s cousin had forced them to introduce Phi as “a friend we met at Dcom who didn’t have anyone to celebrate with”, which was true, if a bit inaccurate.

Phi looked away from him. “Well, technically I do, it’s just…”

“Not on good terms?”

“Haven’t talked to them in a long time.”

“Foster family or somethin’?”

“…Yeah.”

The man stroked his stubble-covered chin. “Well, I don’t have a problem with a stranger bein’ here if it’s you.”

Phi had mixed feelings about that statement, but the man didn’t seem to notice and walked away.

After a minute, Phi began to feel awkward just standing there and moved into the living room area. Set into the wall was an unlit fireplace and, thankfully, there were no Christmas decorations. Nine people had gathered there, including Sigma.

“What’s she doin’ here?” a guy in the crowd asked.

“My mom begged me to bring her,” Sigma replied with a hint of joking in his tone.

Phi gave him a hard look. “You didn’t mention that.”

He didn’t seem to have heard her, as he didn’t even look in her direction. Phi felt mildly annoyed, but decided to let it be. It ultimately didn’t matter whether or not Sigma’s mother had asked her to come as long as she was allowing Phi to be there.

Phi cautiously walked over to a navy blue couch next to the fireplace and sat down. She still felt like she wasn’t supposed to be there, and it felt awkward to be stared at by several people, even if they didn’t stare for too long.

After a few minutes, a young boy approached her and stared at her intensely. Phi was about to ask him what he was doing when the boy said, “Your glasses have no lenses.”

She blinked. “You’re right. They don’t.”

“But that’s silly. Why would you wear glasses without lenses?”

“They make me look professional.”

They continued on for a few minutes. No matter what Phi said, the boy just couldn’t seem to understand why someone would wear glasses when they didn’t need to. Phi didn’t mind, though. She liked kids, and the boy definitely wasn’t trying to insult her.

“Oh, hello you two,” Sigma’s mother suddenly said. When Phi turned to look at her, she noticed that the older woman was wearing glasses with lenses.

“Hi Aunt Norma,” said the boy.

Her name’s Norma?, Phi internally remarked.

“Sorry to interrupt,” said Norma, “but may I talk to you, Phi? Upstairs?”

“Uh… Sure.” Phi looked at the boy. “We’ll continue this later, okay?”

The boy pouted and crossed his arms, but said, “Okay.”

Norma led Phi to the stairs leading up, the wooden floor creaking under their feet.

0~*~0

The second story was where the bedrooms were, and were, as Phi expected, deserted. Norma led her to the room at the end of the hall, which appeared to be the largest. The bed had two red pillows and a blanket with thick diagonal lines creating diamond patterns. There was also a white ceiling fan, but it was motionless.

Phi turned to face Norma. “So what you’d want to talk about?”

She stared down at the floor, her expression solemn.

“…Is it about Sigma?”

Her eyes flickered up. “Yes.”

“Look, I don’t know how to explain it to-“

“I don’t want explanations. I just want answers.”

Phi’s eyebrows went up as she waited for Norma to continue.

“Something happened to him last winter, at that…wherever it was. He’s different, and yet…I can still see him in there.” She looked pleadingly at Phi. “Phi… Is Sigma still in there?”

“Yes,” Phi said with a nod.

Norma let out a soft but audible sigh of relief. She stayed silent for a few moments before saying, “Can you tell me…what the best way to think of him as is now?”

Phi raised an eyebrow. “What the best way to think of him as is now?”

“Well, I’m…not really sure how to explain it. I guess it just seems that he’s…older, in a way.”

Phi briefly thought about whether to lie or tell the truth. “…He has the mind of a man in his late 60s.”

Norma gave Phi a stare the likes of which she had never seen. She took a few steps forward and put her hands on Phi’s shoulders.

“Phi… Are you my granddaughter?”

Phi could only wonder if she had been wondering that for a while or if that had somehow been kicked off by what Phi had just said, but regardless, she answered, “Yes.”

Norma looked down, hiding her eyes. Her lips twitched into a smile as she let out a soft chuckle.

Phi waited for her grandmother to say something, but she didn’t. After a few minutes, she looked back up, wearing a sad smile on her face. “I…need to go back downstairs. They’ll…need my help with the cooking.”

It took a few seconds for Phi to realize that Norma was waiting for her to respond. “O-Okay.”

Norma let go of Phi’s shoulders and left the room, heading back down the stairs. Phi stood there, unsure of what to do next.

0~*~0

Thirty minutes later, Phi was still in the bedroom, though she had moved to sitting on the bed. She heard the stairs creak as someone came up, and was mildly surprised to see Sigma come in the room.

“Oh, hey,” she said.

Sigma’s expression was more relaxed than it normally was. “Not used to big family gatherings like this, are you?”

Phi looked down. “Not really. Growing up, it was always just me and my foster parents, and they were pretty old. I don’t think they had any other family members to celebrate with.”

She glanced back up and saw that his expression had gone back to its normal seriousness.

“…Your mom’s nice,” she said, hoping to change the mood.

Sigma’s eyebrows relaxed a bit as he nodded. “Glad you like her. She seems pretty fond of you.”

“You didn’t tell me that she had asked you to bring me.”

A flash of guilt went across Sigma’s face. “I didn’t want to make you feel like you had to come.”

A few moments of awkward silence followed.

Phi broke the silence by saying, “So, what’d you come up here for?”

“Well, we’re about to eat, so…”

“Oh,” Phi said before sliding off the bed and following Sigma downstairs.

0~*~0

The rest of the family had gathered in the dining room, and most of them had already sat down. The kids had their own appropriately-sized table. Phi ended up sitting between Sigma and Norma, the latter of whom had saved her a seat.

The sheer amount of food on the table made Phi’s mouth water, but she only took some garlic bread, mashed potatoes, green beans, and what she assumed was glazed ham.

“You can have some more if you want, dear,” Norma said quietly.

“No, I’m fine,” Phi assured her.

And then she realized. Wait, did she just call me “dear”?

Nobody else seemed to notice, so Phi decided to let it go for now. She did, however, feel less reluctant to grab more food as time went on.

0~*~0

“Phi, would you like to have some dessert?”

Phi nearly jumped at the sound of Norma’s voice. She had moved back into the living room area onto the couch after finishing dinner, having no real reason to stay in the dining room.

Norma was looking at her from inside the dining room’s doorway. There seemed to be a slight hesitance in her expression.

“…All right,” Phi said as she got up and walked back into the dining room.

The only other people in the room were the kids, all of whom were sitting at the grown-ups’ table and eating what appeared to be some sort of pie. Most of them were already half-finished with it.

Norma handed Phi a plastic plate with a piece of pie and a fork on it. Her expression made Phi raise an eyebrow, but she didn’t comment on it.

Phi sat down in the same spot she had during dinner and started eating it. The taste nearly made her moan in pleasure.

Upon seeing Phi start eating the pie faster, Norma asked, “What do you think?”

“It’s delicious!” Phi exclaimed with her mouth half-full.

Norma smiled. “I’m glad you like it.”

By the time Phi finished with the pie piece, Norma was gathering up the messy plates the kids had left behind. Phi handed Norma her plate and fork and went back into the living room area, licking her lips.

As she sat down on the couch, cheers came from downstairs, presumably from the men watching sports (Phi was silently glad that Sigma wasn’t one of them).

She looked over at the now lit fireplace and began to feel relaxed for the first time since she had entered the house.

“Uh, hey…”

Phi glanced up and saw one of Sigma’s uncles, the one she had talked to earlier. “Hey.”

The man crouched down and gave her a serious look. “I take it ya don’t…understand the significance of that dish ya just ate.”

Phi tilted her head. “Apparently I don’t.”

The man put a fist against his hip. “Well, it’s sort of a tradition in the family for the grandparents to give that particular recipe to their grandkids.”

Phi raised an eyebrow. “Huh.”

“And only their grandkids.”

Phi didn’t respond, only staring at him with wide eyes.

“How old are you?”

“…21.”

The man looked surprised, but continued. “I don’t know if Norma knows that, but as my sister, I know she doesn’t see people…like…”

The man trailed off, staring at her intently. He leaned in closer to Phi, carefully studying her facial features.

After what almost felt like an eternity, the man moved back, looking very thoughtful. “Hmm.”

He then got up and walked away, leaving Phi to stare after him in mild bewilderment.

0~*~0

They could not have left soon enough. As much as Phi genuinely appreciated Norma’s gestures of acceptance, she still had a hard time dealing with all the people there, especially after they had learned that Norma had given Phi that pie. Nobody had said anything, but it was clear that each person had varying degrees of suspicion towards her.

When it was finally time for Phi, Sigma, and Diana to leave, Phi rushed to get ready.

“See you later, Phi,” Norma said as Phi was putting on her shoes.

“Bye, Norma,” Phi replied as she slipped on her last shoe.

Norma began walking towards Phi while holding out her arms.

“No thanks,” Phi said, and Norma stopped and dropped her arms.

Diana, holding a bag of leftovers, looked in and said, “Ready?”

“Coming,” Phi said as she passed Norma and followed her parents out the front door.

Once outside, Phi almost speedwalked to Sigma’s car and climbed into the backseat as soon as Sigma unlocked the doors. She stared out the window as the other two got into the car, her chin resting in her hand.

It wasn’t until a few minutes after Sigma had started driving when he asked, “So, Phi, what did you think?”

Phi didn’t even glance in his direction. “…Your mom’s pretty nice.”

Sigma didn’t reply. Neither did Diana.

Phi continued to stare out the window, watching the houses that passed by.

She was exhausted.

0~*~0

Phi was honestly a bit surprised to get a text from Diana around noon asking if Phi would be willing to come over for dinner. But she saw no reason not to and sent a reply saying she would.

That evening, she didn’t suspect anything as she walked up to the front door, the sound of chirping insects surrounding her. She rang the doorbell and the door opened to reveal Diana, smiling and looking a bit flustered.

“Hi,” Diana said breathlessly. “You’re early.”

“Is that a problem?” Phi asked.

“No, no, of course not.”

Phi looked over Diana’s shoulder. “Where’s Sigma?”

“He’s in the kitchen. Come on.”

Diana led Phi by the hand into the house, taking her into the kitchen/dining room. The moment Phi saw the table, she let out a small gasp.

On the table was a full Thanksgiving dinner, complete with a turkey and some of the leftovers from the previous night. The table was just barely big enough for all the food. Sigma was standing nearby with a shy, awkward smile on his face.

There were only three placemats on the table.

Sigma and Diana had made a Thanksgiving dinner that was just for the three of them, just like the ones Phi used to have.

Phi looked away, blushing. “…Thanks.”

Warming the Ice

To: @merouses

From: @morphogenetic

“heyo, this is the first fic i’ve ever written – only fitting that it was for zecret santa, I suppose. (still not sure why I decided to make it two chapters. whoops.) it was written for @merouses on tumblr – I hope you enjoy it!”

AO3 link

CHAPTER 1

“Light, I’m going out!”

Please tell me you’re at least wearing something reasonable for the weather, for once.”

Clover rolls her eyes, even though there’s not much of a point. “We’re in Nevada, bro, come on!” she shouts back. “It might be December, but it’s not as cold as it was back in Japan!”

She can almost feel the exasperation from this voice as he replies. “Fine, but I really hope you’re wearing something longer than a miniskirt.”

“Of course I am, Light,” she says, running her hands over her half-bare thighs. “Why would I lie about that?” She smiles as she pecks him on the forehead. “Anyway, I’ll be back in a bit. Tell the bodyguards that they don’t need to keep up with me today. Have fun with your boyfriend!”

Light just sighs as his sister makes her way to the door, recognizing the swishing noise as Clover’s self-described “business-professional bubblegum bitch” skirt. He only has the resolve to say a “Aoi is not my bo-” before he hears the door click shut.

“I can’t believe we have the same parents,” he mutters to no one.

Clover pulls her phone out of her pocket, checking to see if there’s any new texts from Alice. They’ve been planning on a shopping date for a few months, but the two of them have continuously been busy with SOIS work – or busy working at a coffee shop as cover, in Clover’s case – such that they haven’t had any simultaneous free time in a while. She had had to convince Alice to use up some a day of the vacation time she’d accumulated so that they could go Christmas shopping, a task that was, despite Alice’s general workaholic nature, surprisingly easy. Clover was used to having to convince her girlfriend to spend money on little things once in a while – “Come on, treat yourself! Live a little!” – so her easy acceptance of this date did seem a bit odd. But, then again, Clover’s experienced things a lot odder than an easy date acceptance in her lifetime.

Her phone buzzes, and she looks down to see a text displayed on her screen. I’ll be there in a few. got stuck in traffic when I was traveling back from L.A. from that business meeting. She smiles, typing back don’t worry, you’ll be about twenty minutes early. like usual. Alice responds about a minute later with a picture of her, with a mock-exasperated expression and the caption “Better early than 45 years late like you always are.”

Clover is about to reply with an angry face emoticon when she hears the sound of a car pulling up t the curb. She doesn’t even need to look up to know that it’s the Jeep she drove out of the Nevada desert a little over three years ago – the rumble of its engine is unmistakable. She’s a little surprised that Alice has decided to pick this car for a date, given that she basically has the pick of the SOIS’s most secure vehicles, but the thought disappears quickly once Alice rolls down the window and grins while pushing up her sunglasses onto her forehead.

“Miss me?” she says in a smooth tone. “It’s been a while since the last time, hasn’t it?”

“If you mean the last time we went on a date, yeah,” Clover replies while walking to the passenger’s side of the car. “If you mean the last time I saw you, I literally talked to you yesterday. About that case with the religious cult that might be hosting that one terrorist who’s going to bring about the end of humanity?”

Alice waves her comment off as she gets into the shotgun seat. “Not what I meant, and you know it. Also, we do that every day. It’s in the job description, remember?” She turns the radio dial up before Clover can rebut with a sarcastic remark of her own. It’s tuned to a Top 40’s pop station – not the kind of music Alice would be listening to if she wasn’t on a date with one of the biggest unironic fans of the genre in the known universe. She just smiles as she starts the car, Clover already working on her rendition of Carly Rae Jepson’s “Boy Problems.”

“Isn’t that song a decade old by now?” Alice cuts in during the instrumental section. “Why on earth is it still playing on the radio?”

“It’s a classic now, obviously. I’m more surprised that you didn’t ask why I’m singing along to a song called Boy Problems.”

“…Fair enough.”

They don’t talk much for the rest of the drive – it’s not as if they need to at this point, after three years of having known each other. At this point, even being in each other’s presence is enough. Clover continues belting out the lyrics to pop songs that are definitely too old to be playing on the Top 40 any more, while Alice makes her way through Las Vegas traffic, driving towards the nearest non-casino-associated shopping mall. After about half an hour, she manages to find a place, but it takes another ten minutes to find a parking spot in a lot crowded with holiday shoppers.

“Guess we probably should’ve gone shopping earlier, huh?” Clover remarks when she notices her girlfriend’s frustration at the lack of empty spots. “I’m not going to say “I told you so,” but….I told you so.”

“Listen, when you work for a top-secret governmental agency, it’s hard to find time off. Criminals don’t exactly stop for holidays.” Alice glances from side to side, keeping her eyes out for a vacant parking lot.

“Neither do baristas,” Clover rebuts, “but I don’t see that getting in the way of a holiday shopping excursion. Oh, there’s a spot open right over there.”

“Sometimes, I feel like you get a little too into the coffee shop cover.” Alice pulls the Jeep into the empty lot with practiced ease, making sure the wheels are even before turning the engine off. “Anyway, you ready for some Christmas shopping?”she asks while unbuckling her seat belt.

“Boy, am I ever!”

The two of them make their way through all the holiday displays, taking moments occasionally to stop and admire the festive decorations adorning almost every inch of the mall. Clover marvels at the Santa photo-op taking up a significant section of the main lobby.

“What, want to sit on Santa’s lap?” Alice says with a smile. “You’re about the right size for it.”

“First of all, heck off. Secondly, I could do that if I wanted to without waiting for Christmas to come around.”

“Touche.”

They browse stores ranging from confectioneries to holiday-specific clothing stores, trying to hide what they’re getting for each other and barely succeeding. At one point Clover goes into a lingerie store and comes out with a lacy set that is definitely too big for her, face tinged a pale shade of pink, to which Alice just shakes her head in both disapproval and mild amusement.

After a while, Clover says that she needs to use the bathroom, to which Alice says she’ll be waiting just outside. When she comes out, however, Alice is nowhere to be found – not in the bathroom, not in the nearby shops, nowhere. Clover can feel her heart starting to race in her chest as air catches in her throat. She pulls out her phone with shaking hands, barely managing to type out a alice where are you please tell me before sprinting as fast as she can down the mall lobby, not quite knowing where she’s going but deciding that running is better than standing still. Almost barreling over at least four grown men in the process, she races around faster than she has since the second nonary game.

“Clover? CLOVER! I’m right here!”

She whips her head around and comes to a screeching halt, her breath finally catching up with her. Her panic bubbles up in her voice as she shouts “Where were you, Alice? You know you can’t just – can’t just – disappear like that!” Alice looks down and furrows her brows as Clover continues.

“Honestly, what the hell were you thinking, leaving me like that? You know we aren’t supposed to just, I dunno, abandon each other, right?”

“I wasn’t abandoning you, Clover! I was-” Alice halts herself in the middle of her sentence. “Look, it’s not important what I was doing, but I definitely wasn’t doing whatever you think-”

“You broke protocol! You’re supposed to at least tell me that you went somewhere and that you didn’t just, I don’t know, get kidnapped or something!” She pauses to wipe her eyes before murmuring, “You didn’t think I would be worried about that after it’s happened to me twice?”

Alice just looks down to the floor, running her hands through her hair before speaking. “I’m sorry. I should have known better, I just…wanted to surprise you.” She holds out her hand before Clover has a chance to interrupt her. “In retrospect, it was kind of stupid, but….well, there’s a good reason for it, trust me.”

“Am I going to learn this reason?”

“Eventually. Not today, though.” She gives an apologetic smile. “Sorry. I should’ve known better than to just leave you alone without telling you were I was going. Anything you want me to do right now?”

“Can we just…sit for a minute?” Clover points to a bench nearby. “Still gotta…catch my breath…”

Alice obliges, helping her over to the seat and rubbing her back as she closes her eyes and breathes as deeply as she can, trying to still her shaking. She rubs the palms of her hands with her thumbs, focusing on centering herself as she traces slow circles. In, out, in, out. She opens her eyes and gives her girlfriend a shaky smile. “I-I’m okay,” she says, trying to convince herself of it more than she’s trying to sell it to Alice.

“You sure? Your eyes still look red.”

“I’ll be back to normal in a minute or too,” Clover says – a bit of an over-exaggeration, but not too much of one, when she can feel her heart slowing down from its horse-race tempo a few minutes ago. “I’m sorry for wasting some of our date time.”

“You don’t need to apologize, Clover,” Alice says, looking her in the eyes as she says so. “I should be the one apologizing for pushing you into an anxiety attack.”

The two of them don’t say anything else for a minute, taking a breather, before standing up together once Clover indicates she’s ready.

“Well, anything you want to do to end our date on a better note than that?”

“Actually,” Clover says with a mischievous grin, “I saw that they just opened up an ice rink next to the mall.”

“Oh, you have got to be kidding me,” Alice replies, shivering at the mere idea of skating with a jacket as thin as hers is right now. “In this?”

“Uh, yeah, obviously? You just bought a coat.”

“You’ve got a point,” Alice sighs. “Alright, I’m up for it. But I’m warning you, I’m probably a better skater than you.”

“Game on!” Clover says, mouth spread into a toothy grin which gets even the ice queen smiling.

As it turns out, Alice is most definitely a better skater than Clover is. Sure, at first she needs to hold onto the backboard of the rink while moving her feet five inches forward at a time, but, after a few minutes on the ice, she’s the one who has to pull her partner up from constant falls. Clover, as a result, slips into making puns in an attempt to show her dominance.

“Hey, this ice rink is just as frozen as you are!”

“Very funny,” Alice says while rolling her eyes, though Clover can tell she finds the joke mildly amusing despite the obviousness of the pun. “Honestly surprised that you didn’t go for a ‘Hey, this rink is All-ice!‘”

“That’s too blatant of a joke,” she replies, deadpan. “I’m not going to go for something that obvious.”

“And the frozen ice rink joke wasn’t?”

They pause before each of their overly serious expressions causes the other to break into laughter, Clover’s higher-pitched giggle melding well with Alice’s lower alto laugh. The two of them hold loop their hands together, skating in circles around the rink. Alice starts moving her feet into fancy patterns, almost going into a twirl at one point before Clover has to remind her who’s linked to one of her arms. In response, she picks up the girl in pink, putting her into a piggy back around her while she spins.

“Enough, enough!” she laughs. “I get it, you actually have talent on the ice. What aren’t you good at?”

“Well, I’m certainly not good at being you,” Alice replies with a smile. She leans down to peck Clover on the forehead – a gesture to which she immediately blushes – before asking if she’s had enough skating.

“Theoretically, I could skate forever,” Clover replies. “In actuality, I’m freezing my butt off, my feet hurt, and I really just want to go and get dinner.”

“Can’t blame you for the last two, though that first one is a little too literal for my tastes.”

“Shut up,” she says while brushing bits of ice off the back of her skirt. She bends down to untie the laces of her rented skates, sighing at relief when she gets one of the boots off. “I didn’t mean it that way and you know it.”

“Suuuure you didn’t.” Alice continues on as Clover glares at her. “Anyway, what did you want to have for dinner? I was thinking Chinese would be nice.”

At that, her girlfriend’s eyes light up, and she nods furiously, not even needed to reply out loud. She stands up after taking off her other skating boot and putting her own shoes back on, leaning up on her toes to kiss Alice on the nose before taking her hand. The two of them grin at each other while making their way out of the rink to Clover’s favorite restaurant a few blocks away, knowing that they can count on just enjoying one another’s company. Their relationship isn’t perfect by any means, but is certainly one which both of them would miss if it was gone.

Earlier, at the mall:

“Hey, isn’t that Alice?” Junpei asks Akane, who’s sitting next to him drinking hot chocolate after a long hour of holiday shopping themselves. He squints, not quite sure if that’s her at this distance, especially when his knowledge of her in this timeline is fairly limited to selfies that Clover has sent him.

Akane turns her head around and glances into the storefront “Yep, that’s her. Not exactly sure what she’s doing in a jewelry store, though – she’s not really the type to do buy something for herself.”

He shrugs a bit, before his eyes widen in possible realization. “Wait, is she – “

“Unless you want to ask her yourself, I doubt you’re going to find out.”

Junpei sighs, knowing that going up to a tiger and poking it with a stick would probably be less scarring than walking up to Alice out of nowhere and asking her what she was doing buying jewelry. Probably for the best, as she walked away a few minutes later, putting the tiny bag into one from a clothing store in what he thought was an attempt to hide it.

Why would she need to hide a jewelry bag? he briefly thinks to himself, before shrugging and returning to inhaling his smoothie. Guess I’ll find out eventually.

CHAPTER 2

Alice presses the doorbell of the Kurashiki apartment, hearing a “Coming, coming!” a few seconds later before the door opens to reveal a grinning Junpei. “Hey, Alice, nice seeing you!”

She follows him into the living room, where everyone is gathered around a tree that looks like it was decorated by an eight year old with too many baubles at their disposal. She’d honestly rather be at the Fields’ house for celebrating Christmas, with at least one less Kurashiki at that kind of party than here, but, alas, Akane and Aoi have the biggest apartment, and so, by default, host the annual holiday party. She takes off her jacket and puts it on the coat rack, smiling a bit to herself as she thinks, Well, I’ve got a bigger audience this way.

Alice has barely entered the living room before she hears a cry of “Alice!” and feels a vice grip of a hug surround her. “You’re gonna love the present I got you.”

“Same goes for you,” she says with a smile as Clover unhooks her arms from Alice’s waist.

They take seats next to one another on the carpet, opposite Junpei, who’s sitting between Akane and Carlos and looking at both with glances of adoration. Light, who probably arrived at the same time Clover did, has his arm around Aoi’s in a way that seems to indicate more than just a blind man needing physical guidance. Phi sits between the people she now knows as her parents, looking even more uncomfortable than usual – she probably didn’t want to even go to the party, Alice thinks, but probably felt obligated to, after everything that had happened in the last few years. She is a bit surprised to see Eric, who is looking just as uncomfortable as usual, but figures that Junpei must have invited him in a gesture of kindness. Even Hazuki and the man everyone continues calling Seven despite knowing his actual name are here, probably because of – or maybe despite – Akane’s invitation.

“Well, let’s get this party on the road, shall we?” Junpei says as he stands up. “We don’t really have any order set up for this, so whoever wants to start can, I guess.”

“I’ll go.” Carlos raises his hand, then picks up a package wrapped with simple white and gold striped wrapping paper. “This one’s for you, Junpei.”

He opens it carefully to reveal a flannel, to which Akane, Aoi, Seven, and Hazuki all start laughing while he simply says, “Haven’t had one of these in a while.” Carlos then whispers something neither Alice nor Clover can hear into his ear, to which Junpei blushes and mutters “Thanks.”

The gift-giving goes on for a while, the party-goers presenting each other presents from the cute (“Aw, a scarf covered in kittens!”) to the overly utilitarian (“We don’t need another blender, Light,” followed by a “So tell me, what do you need that you couldn’t just buy yourself?”) to the frankly weird (“….a giant gel creature?” “It’s a jellyfish toy!” “…….Pardon, but why are you giving me a jellyfish toy?”). By the end, though, Clover notices that her girlfriend hasn’t given her a present at all – weird, when she’s usually one of the first to go – a concern quickly put to rest when she claps loudly to grab the attention of the living room.

“I have a gift that I didn’t give to Clover earlier,” Alice says with some degree of hesitance. “I thought it was better to wait until the end.”

“Well, give it to her, then!” Aoi yells impatiently, to which Alice just smiles and nods. She reaches into the pocket of her dress before taking out a small rectangular box and dropping on to one knee. Clover’s eyes immediately widen as she claps her hands over her mouth to try to cover an “Oh my god…” from escaping.

“Clover Field, in the three years that we’ve known each other, I have grown to trust you more than anyone else in my life. From the moment you picked me up off the side of a road in the middle of the desert, I knew you were going to play an important part in my life, but I didn’t realize just how important until you joined the SOIS – and, after that, when we started dating.” She pauses a moment to glance for a moment around the room, noticing all the open-mouthed faces around her before she continues.

“You are the most beautiful, most caring, most kind person I have ever met, and I would be honored if you wanted me to spend the rest of my life with you.” She pulls the ring out of the box. “Clover, will you marry me?”

“Yes, oh my god, yes!”

April 13th, 2029

to: @guessworks-art

from: @windsorgirllove

Merry Christmas! Hope you enjoy! Some VLR!End JunpeixCarlos

Junpei paced around the cramped apartment. Left, right. Six steps up, six steps to the side, six steps down. He sighed. He ought to be home by now.

The news was bad. Worse than it usually was, even. Ever since Radical-6 was released on the world, death tolls, crime rates, everything had gone up. It was a busy time to be a firefighter.

Busy time to be a detective too, probably, not that Junpei had been doing much detective work lately. Ever since he had woken up in the middle of Nevada with no memories, again, he hadn’t really felt like doing any detective work. He hadn’t felt like doing anything, really. He hadn’t even been home in the four months since then.

He guessed he was lucky that Carlos had found him. He still had no idea how he had gotten to America, but apparently he had found him collapsed on the ground and brought him to the hospital. He had saved his life.

There were three short knocks on the door. Junpei rushed to unlock it, practically throwing the door open. “You’re late,” he accused.

“Sorry,” Carlos said, scratching his neck. He was covered with more ash than usual today. “Long day.”

“I can see that,” Junpei said, stepping aside to let him through. He glanced outside suspiciously, then closed the door, replacing the locks. “Anything exciting happen?”

“Oh, the usual.” Carlos cracked a smile, which quickly faded. “Someone jumped in front of the truck.”

“Again?” Junpei asked, fetching two glasses from the cupboard. “Pretty soon they’re just gonna close the roads.”

“But if they do that, we wouldn’t be able to get help to anyone,” Carlos pointed out. He accepted the cracked cup from Junpei.

“It’s like the apocalypse out there.” Junpei commented, pulling a bottle of gin from under the counter.

“Not yet,” Carlos muttered. He shook his head when Junpei offered him the bottle. “Just water.”

Junpei shrugged and tipped the bottle back, taking a swig for himself. Carlos reached over and snatched the bottle from his hands. “Just water,” he said again.

Junpei rolled his eyes, filling the cups with water instead. “We might as well start drinking now,” he said. “It’s not like things can get much worse.”

“Let’s wait anyway,” Carlos said. “We can save it for a special occasion.”

“Ooh, how romantic,” Junpei teased, perching on the edge of the couch. “Are you gonna take me on a picnic?”

“W-well, I-” Carlos stuttered. Junpei laughed as he got more flustered. He was saved from answering by the news clicking on.

“Today is April 13th, 2029, and this is the evening news.”

Carlos sat up with a start. “Today’s April 13th?!”

“Shh, I’m trying to watch the news,” Junpei said, smacking him in the shoulder.

“Unfortunately, I…” The newscaster took a deep breath. “I’m sorry. I don’t have any news to read. All of our station’s reporters have – have passed after contracting Radical-6. So have my…” She brushed her eyes, clearly struggling to remain composed. “Excuse me. I’ve managed to keep us on the air until now, but I’m out of tricks.” She shrugged, smiling sadly. “It’s time for me to sign off. This concludes our broadcast day. I pray that someday our world can be cleansed of this horrible plague.” She took a breath, and with a shaking hand brought a handgun out from under her table and pressed it to her temple. “Goodbye.”

The shot rang around their tiny apartment followed by a loud crash. Junpei looked over and saw that Carlos had dropped the glass he was holding.

“Come on, man we only have so many of those,” he joked weakly. Carlos didn’t respond. “Hey, come on. It’ll be fine.” He reached over and clicked off the tv, which had gone to static once the woman had shot herself. “We’ll get through this. I mean, it’s not like it’s any worse than what you see everyday.”

Carlos was still silent, and Junpei thought he had said the wrong thing. Then he shook himself, and said quietly, “Right.” He stared at the shards of glass for a few more seconds, then turned to face him. “Junpei, do you want to go on that picnic?”

“What?” Junpei laughed, but Carlos was dead serious. “Uh, sure man. Whatever you want. Just… not right now, though,” he continued, putting a hand on Carlos’s arm. “Cause it’s dark out.”

“…Right,” he said, as though he’d just remembered. “Tomorrow. Or the next day. We have time. We have time.” He kept repeating that, quieter and quieter. Junpei shook him.

“You alright? You’re scaring me, dude.”

“I am? I am. Sorry.” He ran a hand through his hair. “It’s just…” He reached up and cradled Junpei’s cheek. “You’re important to me. You know that, right?”

“Um, yeah?” Junpei brought his hand to Carlos’s. “Same here? What’s going on?”

“Nothing. Nothing, everything’s fine-”

“No! Tell me.” He stared into Carlos’s eyes. Ever since they met Carlos had been tip toeing around him, like he thought he would break. Or like he knew something Junpei didn’t. “What’s happening? What do you know?”

“Junpei?” Carlos asked.

“Yeah?”

“Do you trust me?”

“…yes.”

“Then kiss me.”

He didn’t even hesitate. As they kissed the world lit up. Across the planet, all eighteen antimatter plants exploded simultaneously. And inside a ramshackle apartment outside of Los Angeles, they clung to each other, oblivious as the world came tumbling down.