http://fuckingqb.livejournal.com/ (
fuckingqb.livejournal.com) wrote in
tampered2008-02-14 03:43 pm
LOG; Complete
When; February 14th, 2008
Rating; PG (language)
Characters; Anezaki Mamori [
fuckingmanager], Hiruma Yoichi [
fuckingqb]
Summary; There's a bit of tension in the apartment after a rather unexpected exchange of words resulted in Mamori being more than a little irritated at Yoichi.
Log;
Under these circumstances Hiruma was not a loud typer. When he was tense, when there was too much adrenaline making his blood pump too fast, he would find himself hitting the keys on his laptop harder than he should. It was a characteristic under those certain conditions he couldn't help and didn't bother trying. But when he was calm, when he was not forced to think as fast as he was able (and faster still on some occasions), when he could let himself relax marginally, he was a fairly soft typist.
Right now, the strokes of his typing were heard very distinctly, not because he was tense; he was, but not in the same way that he was on the football field. This was a different kind of tension, borne under a heavy, almost itchy silence.
Hiruma's shoulder twitched and he glanced over the top of his laptop screen at the woman in the kitchen. His gaze didn't linger, going back to his work despite the almost impatient prickling in his fingertips.
Rating; PG (language)
Characters; Anezaki Mamori [
Summary; There's a bit of tension in the apartment after a rather unexpected exchange of words resulted in Mamori being more than a little irritated at Yoichi.
Log;
Under these circumstances Hiruma was not a loud typer. When he was tense, when there was too much adrenaline making his blood pump too fast, he would find himself hitting the keys on his laptop harder than he should. It was a characteristic under those certain conditions he couldn't help and didn't bother trying. But when he was calm, when he was not forced to think as fast as he was able (and faster still on some occasions), when he could let himself relax marginally, he was a fairly soft typist.
Right now, the strokes of his typing were heard very distinctly, not because he was tense; he was, but not in the same way that he was on the football field. This was a different kind of tension, borne under a heavy, almost itchy silence.
Hiruma's shoulder twitched and he glanced over the top of his laptop screen at the woman in the kitchen. His gaze didn't linger, going back to his work despite the almost impatient prickling in his fingertips.

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Where Hiruma manifested his frustration outwardly, Mamori tended to wrap it up and tuck it away, out of sight. Blue eyes flickered up, gaze lingering on Hiruma's broad shoulders for a moment before the distraction was quickly tossed aside once more, fingers grasping the sides of the plate with a little more force than necessary as Mamori walked over to the living room and placed the dish on the coffee table nearby.
It wasn't proper, but what were the odds that Hiruma would want to eat at the dining table anyway?
Lips drawn in a tight line, Mamori then returned to her own plate, already growing cold on the table. A pair of pink chopsticks prodded at the fried egg, poking holes in the omelete before taking a bite.
Not enough salt.
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He'd existed with Mamori in silence before. Most of the time it was hardly noticeable--it was simply the way things were. This silence was noticeable. It was impossible to ignore. It carried too much of a weight to it.
Tch. It was again a thought and not an actual expressed sound. Fucking manager. Wordlessly Hiruma moved his laptop to one knee, grabbing up the plate she'd left on the coffee table and putting it on his other knee. The chopsticks were held negligently in one hand, the other at the keyboard, dividing his attention between the twin tasks of work and eating.
And, much as he tried not to, interrupting both just long enough to throw a glance at the only other human occupant of the apartment.
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She pushed the rice from one end of the plate to the other, eventually letting out a slight sigh and picking up the almost untouched plate to carry to the counter, pulling a roll of plastic wrap from a nearby drawer; she'd save the meal for when she had an appetite.
Her lips pursed as Mamori then moved on to washing the dishes, trying to form words of apology and failing, unless "stupid Hiruma-kun" counted somehow.
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He wasn't an idiot. He knew that Mamori was waiting for him to apologize for what he'd said earlier. Whether or not what he said was right or wrong was, at this point, irrelevant, because at this point it was plainly apparent that she felt he owed her an apology. Everything else was moot.
He ground his teeth together, looking back at his computer.
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But the desire to break the silence was real, and so Mamori made a quick trip to her room, fishing out a notepad and flashcards which she had found in the marketplace, and carrying the supplies out to the dining room, laying them out on the table. The cap of her ballpoint pen held between her teeth, Mamori's brow furrowed slightly as she began to draw out game plays with amazing alacrity, most of them second-nature after a rather busy football season.
She might've claimed, a couple of days ago, that she no longer cared for being the 'fucking manager,' but deep down, Mamori was pretty sure both of them knew this wasn't the case.
And that, on some level, she was already more than willing to put up with Hiruma's obstinance.
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Watching her from the corner of his eye, the scratch of her pen over her note cards blended with the soft, occasional keystroke from his laptop. It was a familiar filler to the thick silence that almost let him relax a bit more. He didn't. There was still too much yet unspoken for him to relax again, at least as much as he ever allowed himself to.
Still, it was familiar and almost lulling; Hiruma wondered if that was her intent. To try and get him to drop his guard with the routine of it all. Hiruma's lips quirked up, just slightly, vaguely amused at the thought.
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"I figured that you probably didn't bring the originals to the City," Mamori explained, forcing a bit of levity in her voice, although it just didn't quite seem to fit.
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He grinned, putting the rubber band back in place and dropping the cards into the bag beside his chair.
He could comment that she'd remembered them all, but he wouldn't. He knew she would remember them all; she knew he expected her to. Few people spent as much time planning and preparing for the Devil Bat games, in terms of strategy, then they did. Mamori might not have been able to put on a uniform and get on the field, but she easily worked as hard as the others, simply in a different capacity.
She wouldn't expect him to acknowledge her memory of all the plays regardless.
So instead he arched an eyebrow at her. "Know something I don't know, fucking manager?"
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Eventually, Mamori would probably be able to read even those. Or at least, so she hoped.
But for now, she'd opt for vaguely avoiding the topic rather than guessing incorrectly. He deserved that much.
"Mm," Mamori shrugged, letting her fingers linger for a little longer in his hair before pulling away, resting her hand on the back of the couch.
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So, while he made no move to get up and put the plate away right now, it didn't meant that eventually he wouldn't. If left on his own.
He knew that Mamori's more domestic tendencies would kick in long before his own. They always did.
While outwardly he appeared to be ignoring Mamori, in reality he was acutely aware of the fact that she was standing near him. He didn't usually, of course; he'd become accustomed to her looking over his shoulder and reading whatever it was that had captured his attention. This was convenient for him, of course, since it meant that he wouldn't have to explain it to her later. It made it easier for her to understand the route of his thinking. He'd grown accustomed to her being able to keep up with him.
This time, however, either because of the weird silence of earlier, or because her hand had lingered against his hair (something he couldn't recall her having done before), Hiruma's attention was split between the screen of his laptop and the girl beside him.
"You didn't eat much." He said off-handedly, not looking up at her. It was simply an observation.
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Mamori wasn't sure whether to be relieved that he wasn't angry, or to be irritated that he'd purposefully pulled a kindergarten-level silent treatment, lack of apology and all. Maybe there was a bit of both.
Which was frustrating, because if there was any indication of a power imbalance between the two of them, this would be it. Anger, while it certainly wasn't something Mamori sought in life, was still an indication that she could hold steadfastly to her beliefs, and showed that she wouldn't be swayed by the moment. And it was something she often lost while with Hiruma.
It was why, rather than mentally cursing at him, Mamori had spent much of the time spent brooding in her room wondering whether the chocolates she'd made for him had been a bad idea after all.
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He knew why things had been the way they were, a moment ago. He wasn't an idiot. Frankly he was surprised that it had taken so little to get her talking to him again. He was used to being on the receiving end of her anger, and he never apologized when he pissed her off--typically when he did, it was completely intentional. He liked seeing her get like that.
He'd had no intention of apologizing this time either, but frankly he'd expected her to ignore him a bit longer. The fact that she didn't had him wondering why.
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And not taking chances, on the other hand, left a person with an undeniable sense of unease, of opportunities missed. Not everything could be backtracked, in that sense, and sometimes Mamori felt as though without reaching out, people would begin to slip through her fingers. On one hand, it was good in the sense that the lives of her friends were progressing; on the other, Mamori felt stagnant by comparison, unable to follow unless she held them tight within her grasp.
The spot where the cards had been placed before were now replaced by a small box of chocolate, Mamori's fingers lingering just long enough to get them to balance on Hiruma's head.
"And before you say no, they're sugar-free."
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It sat in his palm, a girly presence complete with a tiny little box. It wasn't the first Valentine's Day chocolate he'd ever received--there were some girls that had given him chocolate before, giggling things that had blushed and run away as soon as it was delivered. He never ate any of it; it was all guaranteed to be a cavity inducing horror. Kurita usually ended up eating it (there were a few occasions where a girl had handed over her chocolate, wrapped in such a pretty display supposedly meant to entice, and in the same movement Hiruma had tossed the box at Kurita. Those girls stopped giving him chocolate).
He stared at the box Mamori had given him, considering, before finally saying, "Tch," quietly, tossing it, too, into the bag with the cards.
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She wasn't completely naive. Being a rather popular girl in her year meant that Mamori was also no stranger to admirers or dates or general high school life, and she could recognize the slight tightness in her chest as an indication that she was yearning for something more, even if Mamori's gut reaction was always to deny it, to wrap it and tuck it in a box in the back of her mind. Simply because Hiruma didn't do relationships in the same way that high schoolers normally did, simply because the only thing she could ever picture him being in love with was football and football alone. Hiruma was extraordinary, no doubt about that, and even if one some level Mamori yearned for change, at the same time, she recognized that such a change might completely alter who he was at a person, and then... what would the point be, in the end?
Unfortunately, Mamori wasn't on the same level. She didn't have anything she could devote her all to, and in doing so, ignore her surroundings. She was just a normal girl trying to find her own little niche in a world where big sister figures were quickly growing out of fashion.
And maybe it was that spark of loneliness that prompted her to sit down on the couch, leaning against Hiruma's arm, head coming to a rest on his shoulder in admission of the fact that maybe it was something other than anger which had set her off in the first place.
"What're you working on?"
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Mamori surprised him often, and this was no exception.
He kept typing, not trying to hide the things on his screen so that, should she want to look, she would be able to see it. A lot of it was probably not interesting to her anyway--code and numbers as Hiruma worked through the system, looking for whatever it was he needed.
"Learning the fucking City." He finally said, pulling up an aerial satellite image.
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It was fortunate that Hiruma was there with her; had Mamori come to the City by herself, she probably would've landed herself in deep trouble without even noticing. As it was, Mamori actually had time to reflect upon life back home rather than just hanging on by the skin of her teeth as many other citizens seemed to do.
She missed it. Home. Her friends. Familiarity.
There was no point in relaying that to Hiruma, however.
"Mmm..." Mamori acknowledged with a slight nod of her head, before turning her head slightly so that her nose rested against the soft fabric of Hiruma's shirt, where a faint, grassy scent still remained. After a few seconds, however, she pulled back, breaking the contact between the two of them to sink deeply into the cushions of the couch.
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He'd spent a lot of time building a network in Deimon, in Tokyo in general. It was something of a comfort zone, and while Hiruma was more than capable of building a similar network here, of surviving and succeeding in this City until he could finally go home, he acknowledged that capability wasn't at all mutually exclusive with desire. He'd leave this place in a moment for home if he could.
He glanced at her when she moved, trying to figure through and understand her actions. He thought he might know; he figured she was probably lonely. When certain people were absent from your life...
He looked back at his screen, tapping at the keys, chewing his gum.
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"I'm sure you'll figure the City out in no time," she grinned, shaking her head slightly, not bothering to berate him for the blackmail.
Just this once.
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"No fucking time at all."