Synopsis: I’d spent the majority of my life
believing one thing, and then BAM, life smacked me right between the
eyes, leaving me dazed and befuddled. Why had I never realized my feelings for
him until now[NaruSaku
Author’s Note: This story is a mere one-shot, so
what you see is what you get. (wink) I’d say it takes place maybe ten years
after the current manga chapters. Hope you guys enjoy.
Disclaimer: I do not own Naruto.
In Anger and Affection
It’s funny,
sometimes, how things turn out. There are many words that can describe my
current situation – ironic, ridiculous, regrettable. I’d be all too happy if I
never had to leave the shield of blankets currently covering me as I lay in
bed, bemoaning the sudden turn in my life. Those around me were ignorant about
the reason of my despondency, and in fact, I knew they were quite mystified by
my sudden seclusion.
I’d spent the majority of
my life believing one thing, and then BAM, life smacked me right between
the eyes, leaving me dazed and befuddled.
When had it happened?
How had it happened?
And why was I so pissed
off? Why did I feel the need to smash my fist into the ground with all my
might, and create a crevice the size of the village? Why did I feel the need to
clench my teeth when talking? Last week, for the first time in my life, I
literally saw red for almost an entire day. I’m well aware that I’m emotional
woman, but to say my recent reaction was normal would be stretching the truth.
In the beginning, when I
had first noticed my troubling reaction, it hadn’t been too bad. Maybe a little
irritating, and slightly surprising, but nothing to overly fret about. When I
had snapped my pencil cleanly in two, I’d frowned and mentally shrugged. Then
when I had slammed my hand down so hard on the Hokage’s desk that I had broken
it, I’d raised not only my eyebrows in distress, but the rest of those who were
in the office as well. But, when the small, invisible tie keeping my feelings
contained had snapped just yesterday, everything had come flooding out like an
explosive tidal wave, blinding and enveloping me in a rage that had been barely
controllable. And without a word I had left the crowded room for fear of
causing bodily harm to those around me.
Of course the root of my
problem would have to be a man. My infuriating, naïve, optimistic, confident,
and irksome best friend, in fact. He created some problem every week with his
trademark smile curved on his lips, and his eyes twinkling with a hint of
mischievous temerity. After years in his presence, I’ve learned to deal with
the ridiculous escapades that he always manages to drag me into some way or the
other. But what has me so angry is not one of his retarded little plans, but
something different entirely. And in truth, he isn’t the main person that my
fury is directed at. But I’m still very cross with him, have no doubt.
The first time that I saw her,
I knew trouble would be brewing. Bright red hair, legs that went up to her
eyeballs, lips so pouty and pink that they could entice even the most eclectic
of men. I had come to the conclusion right after meeting her and watching the
surrounding men follow her in a stumbling stupor that she sucked out their
souls when they stared into her eyes. Women, thankfully, were immune to it. Her
clothing wasn’t revealing in a scandalous way, but it was just perfect enough
to give an ample view of her charms without showing anything. Her fingernails
were even painted the same obnoxious red as her hair. It was damnably annoying
how the men salivated.
If she hadn’t been a
representative of the Waterfall Village sent to help negotiate a peace treaty,
then I would have happily kicked her ass out of the village and then some for
good measure.
But most importantly, what
I can’t quite understand is why the Rokudaime had to be her own personal
tour-guide? Couldn’t Naruto have designated some other dignitary or
respected jounin to fulfill the duty? He had more important things to do as the
leader of the village that didn’t include the leech-like presence of Fai.
I shuddered unconsciously at the mere thought of her name.
Fai.
With a grimace, I threw back the sheets from my face and took a deep breath
of fresh air.
Every time I saw her manicured fingers grip Naruto’s forearm, or come to
rest on any part of his anatomy, I felt a vein bulge in my forehead. Her tinkle
of laughter sent tremors down my spine. Her voice curdled my blood. It was
almost embarrassing how much I disliked the woman. Well, in all honesty,
dislike is too kind a word.
There was one thing yesterday, however, that annoyed me the most. For
something so apparently simple, it had sure triggered a response that had been
beyond imagination for me. I’m still reeling from it.
I closed my eyes, and nibbled absently on my lower lip.
Fai believes herself to be a master at telling jokes. If there was a way to
inform her that her jokes fell flat without seeming rude, I would have been
happy to point out her failings. But, alas, there had never been an opening.
Yesterday’s joke had been just as awful as the ones before it, but for some
reason at the end, Naruto had smiled. But it hadn’t been the smile he typically
gave Fai after her jokes, the one he presented with his head cocked to side,
his lips curved, eyes tinged with a little bemusement. It hadn’t even been the
smile he carried on his lips for all occasions – polite and open. It had been
the one he only presented to me. The one where his eyes deepened to a
slightly deeper hue of blue and bespoke of a secret amusement, and where his
lips curved slightly to side, not too shallow, not too deep. I had felt like he
might as well have punched me in the gut when the expression crossed his face,
and Fai had preened so proudly of herself in response.
I hated knowing that someone else, especially her, was privy to
something that had always been exclusively mine, even if it only was something
so simple as a smile.
I could feel my turbulent emotions swirling in my chest, making it harder to
breathe, harder to think, harder to move. And I just knew that it would be
terribly hard to face him when under the grasp of such tangled thoughts. As
tangled as they were, I knew that this was deeper than anything I’d felt
before. I hated to put a name to it and make it real and touchable. But, who
was I trying to fool? Certainty not myself. I’d never be able to go back to
being oblivious or ignorant.
Would he be able to see through me? My heart skittered nervously in my
chest, and I heaved a heavy breath. It was beyond frightening to deal with
emotions that I had been peacefully oblivious of until now. It seemed almost
unnatural for them to spill out uncontrollably all at one time and leave me
dizzy in the aftermath. It would have been better, more comforting, if there
had been something gradual about it – some sort of slow realization that was
heart-warming and tender and contented.
As a little girl, I had admired the fastest, the most skilled, the best
looking boy there had been. As a teenager, I had become infatuated with said
boy to the point I had naively believed myself in love. As a woman, I had come
to realize that the feelings I had always felt for Sasuke weren’t as deep, as
pure as I had once hoped. I did, and still do love him. But, not in the way I
had always thought. I wasn’t in love with him. No. Somehow I’d fallen
straight, head-first into love with the blond squirt who had always seemed so
annoying and childish. I’m not quite sure how he had laid siege to my heart
without me even realizing, and I’m extremely befuddled on how he managed to
take over without warning, but the emotions lodged in my chest are very real,
very permanent, and very, very annoying.
I suddenly felt the overwhelming need to punch Naruto. Hard.
I sat up in bed, snatched my flattened pillow and had been about to take my
frustration out on it when I heard a soft knock at the door of my apartment,
followed by a tentative “Sakura?” from my mother. I rolled my eyes heavenward,
tumbled unceremoniously out of bed and stalked grumpily out of the bedroom. By
the time I reached the front door, my mother’s knock had gotten louder, as had
her voice.
When she set eyes on my tousled hair, dark-rimmed eyes, and the thin set of
my mouth, she said, “I knew something was wrong. You didn’t sound sick on the
phone.” She raised an eyebrow and stared at me for a moment as if waiting for
me to contradict her, and reaffirm the lame lie I told her over the phone a few
hours ago about food poisoning of some sort. When I remained mute, she
continued, “Do you want to talk?”
“Nope,” I replied decisively. I was quite aware of the problem, and though I
knew my mother could give me some very good advice at a time like this, I
wasn’t willing to share feelings with her that were still so new and foreign.
Rather than be offended by my curt answer, she sighed melodramatically. “Are
you sure?”
I leaned against the doorjamb and offered a tight smile that I knew would
pacify her for the time being. “Very sure.”
She stood still for a moment, frowned, and cocked her head to the side.
“Call me if you change you mind, Sakura.”
“You know I will, Mom.”
I watched as she turned and walked briskly down the hall. I closed the door
when she rounded the corner, and I couldn’t see her anymore. It was as I was
walking back to my bedroom when my stomach let out a loud, angry growl, and I
realized exactly how hungry I was. I tucked an errant strand of hair behind my
ear as my course changed to the kitchen, and I decided that cereal might shed a
brighter light on my current dilemma.
The morning at the hospital had been pure hell. A plague of
clumsiness had taken over the village, and it had seemed the whole population
had spilled into the waiting room with injuries ranging from a paper cut to
broken limbs. I take one day off, and this is what I get the following day.
Ridiculous.
By the time I managed to escape for a break, it was mid-afternoon and every
part of my body ached including my eyebrows. I was hungry, but I just wasn’t in
the mood to go somewhere and wait in line or sit at a table for food, so I
decided I’d grab something from the hospital later. I needed to find a place to
just relax and let the tension ebb from my body.
I wasn’t exactly sure where I was going, but a short while later, I found
myself in a patch of woods not far from my workplace, and heaved a sigh, shoved
off my shoes impatiently, and collapsed onto the ground. At first, I closed my
eyes and relaxed as the familiar sound of the outdoors filled the humid air –
the wind, the trees, the rustle of hidden wildlife. The sun was bright against
my closed eyelids despite the peppering of shade provided by the high-reaching
leaves.
It was a habit of mine to loose myself in the enveloping presence of nature
whenever life became particularly stifling. I was somehow able to blot out my
worries, my fears, my expectations, allowing my mind to become wonderfully
blank. To not think, to not have the heavy press of everyday life’s nuisances
on my shoulders helped to make everything more bearable in the long run. It was
unfortunate, however, that my problems didn’t just evaporate into the air.
I opened my eyes and stared at the various rays of sunlight peeking through
the crisscross of green leaves. There were days when it was harder to escape
and empty my mind, like today, and I always ended up mulling over whatever was
causing such an upheaval in my life.
Naruto’s face suddenly materialized in my mind, a picture of carefree
lightheartedness, his blue eyes hooded with amusement, his lips slightly
curved, his hair tousled as if he’d run his hands through it several times. I
was mortified to feel to feel my heart stutter nervously in my chest, and my
cheeks burn with an impromptu flush. With a jolt, I sat up, buried my face into
my hands, and groaned.
Here I was, sitting in the woods, mooning over some man. But, not
just any man. Naruto. Naruto, for heaven’s sake. I grimaced suddenly as I
wondered what Ino would say about my newfound feelings for my best friend. For
my former teammate. For the Hokage of Konoha. I groaned again, but louder this
time.
“You sound like you’re dying. Please tell me it isn’t so, because I’m no
good at your medic nin stuff,” I heard over my shoulder.
Slowly, I lifted my head and turned toward the familiar voice, and stared in
horror at my petite, blond friend. “Ino,” I choked out. God, I sounded retarded
even to my own ears.
She scrunched her nose in confusion and stared down at me with her hands
placed on her hips. “Did your cat die or something? You look and sound
horrible, Sakura.”
I suddenly thought of my obese orange-haired cat at home and mentally
grimaced. Damn. I forgot to feed him this morning. He’s going to use my legs as
scratching posts tonight when I get home.
Ino raised her eyebrows at my drawn-out pause, and I managed to find my
voice in time to say, “Uh, no. Live. I mean he’s live. Living. He’s still
living.” I wondered how many more ways I could tell her that my cat was still
alive. By the look on her face, she obviously thought I’d fallen and whacked my
head on a rock.
Ino settled down on the grass slowly, her eyes never leaving my face. She
frowned for a moment before telling me, “I think we need to talk about
whatever’s bothering you.”
I resisted the urge to run off in the other direction, and gave Ino a forced
smile. “You shouldn’t worry. Nothing’s wrong. I’m just having a difficult day
at the hospital.”
She quirked an eyebrow and leaned back. “So you’re just going to lie to me?”
She waited a beat for me to respond, but when I remained mute, she sighed.
“You’re too secretive for your own good, you know that? It’s healthy to get
troubling issues off your chest and out in the open. Are you afraid I’ll make
fun of you?”
It wasn’t that, really. I know she’d be amused, she’d laugh and perhaps
crack a joke or two or twenty, and then find every opportunity to shamelessly
embarrass me in front of Naruto. But, it really boiled down to the same reason
that I hadn’t confided to my mother the previous day. I had barely wrapped my
mind around the idea of such a heavy, deep emotion for Naruto. I needed to
understand what was going on in my mind before sharing such private, delicate
thoughts with others – even those closest to me. I know a time will come when
she’ll find out, but it won’t be today. Or tomorrow. Or probably the day after.
And what made me suddenly smile as I watched Ino dust dirt off her leg was that
she wouldn’t be hurt by my silence. Despite being fully aware that she would
badger and make my life hell, I know that she’ll understand. She always has.
“There’s nothing wrong with me,” I responded adamantly, my chin upraised as
I stared at her.
She raised her eyes heavenward for a moment, and shook her head slightly.
“Well, as long as you’re going to remain a stubborn, ridiculous mute,” she
started sardonically, “you might as well come with me to get some food. I’m
starving.”
I sighed. I would get no more peaceful solitude in this patch of forest for
the rest of the day. Might as well do something productive before I had to
report back to work. “What do you have in mind?” I replied as I shoved my bare
feet into my shoes.
“Not ramen,” she immediately retorted with a shudder. “Maybe some odango.”
I couldn’t help but grin as I stood and walked away from the trees.
I shouldn’t have been surprised when he walked into the
hospital later that same afternoon, his arm bleeding profusely, a typical smile
of sheepishness on his face. I was tempted to duck behind my current patient’s
wheelchair, but then I’d look and feel like a complete moron. Instead, I headed
quickly to the hallway, pushing the wheelchair, hoping desperately that he’d
somehow miss me.
“Sakura-chan!”
It was the hair. The pinkness must be some sort of beacon – unique and
obvious. Maybe I should shave it all off. But, would being bald be more
conspicuous? I sighed. I’d miss my hair, anyways.
I turned my head and watched over my shoulder as he hurried over to me, his
arm tucked close to his stomach, the blood seeping into his tunic.
The elder woman in the wheelchair smiled broadly at the Hokage and tilted
her head back to look at me. “Why don’t you take care of him, dear? I’ll just
get the nice young woman over there to take me back to my room.”
I bit back a groan and smiled weakly as I handed her over to the floor
nurse. Naruto came to a stop beside me as she was taken away.
“I was hoping to catch you,” he said, his lips curved in a bright smile,
despite the obviously painful wound.
I glared pointedly at the long gash, and raised a questioning eyebrow. “Dare
I ask how this new injury came about?”
He shrugged. “A construction accident downtown.”
“And you were there because you’re such a wonderful carpenter…,” I queried
dryly.
“Just helping out,” Naruto said with a quick smile.
I sighed and grabbed his uninjured arm, tugging lightly to get him to follow
me. Surprisingly, his skin was cool against my palm despite the warm weather
outside. I kept my eyes peeled in front of me, and tried to not think of the
close contact for fear that my cheeks would become embarrassingly red. When had
I become this bashful? It was absurd.
“I didn’t see you yesterday at the picnic,” he chatted as we made our way
down the hallway.
It took me a moment to remember what I’d been using as an excuse for my
absence. “I got some bad food poisoning,” I replied hastily, glancing briefly
back at him. I bit my lip to keep from smiling when he visibly blanched. The
poor thing was probably terrified he would be the next victim, what with his
bottomless, food-loving stomach.
“Food poisoning! From where?”
Damn. I hadn’t thought of that. I hesitated slightly, and then said, “I
think it was some expired crackers I had in my apartment.”
Naruto made a funny noise that sounded suspiciously like choked laughter.
“You eating expired food, Sakura-chan? That’s not something I ever imagined you
doing. You’ve gotten onto me constantly for doing just that.”
He was making fun of me! I glared at him and yanked him rather roughly into
the empty examination room. That seemed to amuse him even more, but the smart
man tried to hide it in an attempt to curb my wrath. He was learning.
I pointed to hospital bed. “Sit.”
He did so, and watched me as I gathered the materials to help close the
wound. He was surprisingly silent as I pulled up a chair in front of him and
took his injured arm into my hands. I cradled his wrist with one hand and
lifted the other to cover the wound. With a deep breath, I relaxed into my flow
of chakra and let it cover, mold, and envelop the gash. When I briefly glanced
up to his face, I noticed it was slightly whiter than before, but otherwise you
couldn’t tell he felt any pain at all. After a few seconds, my healing seemed
to take effect, and some of his color returned.
“Are you planning on returning to the construction site?” I asked softly.
His eyes caught mine. “Told ‘em I would.”
“Is that for reassurance the mighty Hokage wasn’t irreparably injured, his
future doomed?”
Naruto chuckled, and I felt my lips twitch in response. “A small, splintered
beam couldn’t possibly take me out, have no fear.”
My eyes went down to his injury, then back to his face, and I gave him a
sardonic glare. “Small?”
“Okay. So, it was big. But, still.”
I stopped the flow of healing chakra, and grabbed for the wet washcloth to clean
off bloody residue. There was still a thin slice along the length of his arm,
but it had ceased to bleed, and no longer needed invasive stitches.
As I applied ointment, I told him, “You can go, I guess, but try to avoid
anything strenuous. I’d hate for you to undo all my healing.”
He grunted as he watched me. I grabbed the bandages and began to wrap his
arm. I was acutely aware of his eyes on me as I worked, and it made
irrationally nervous. Thankfully, it didn’t take me long to finish.
I heard more than saw him stand up and meander slowly away from me. I busied
myself with clearing away some of the mess I had made.
“You busy tonight?”
Surprised, I glanced up at him. He stood across from me in the doorway with
his back against the doorjamb, and his arms folded against his chest. His hair
tumbled messily over his forehead protector as it always did, and his eyes were
innocently inquisitive. I opened my mouth to reply, but I couldn’t figure out
how to form the words. I sucked in a breath and tried again.
But before a garble of nonsense could spew from my mouth, he continued. “I
haven’t eaten ramen in so long. I finally talked Fai into eating something
different from the stuff she usually insists on. I can hardly wait.”
He seemed genuinely excited, too. But, at the mention of Fai’s name, I
suddenly remembered how to talk. I averted my eyes, and smiled slightly to help
soften my decline of his offer. “I have a date with my kitchen, actually. I’m
trying to learn how to successfully cook this recipe of mother’s and it hasn’t
been going so well. I was planning on taking another stab at it tonight.”
I heard him sigh. When he placed his hand onto my shoulder, I jumped
slightly, surprised by his sudden proximity. My gaze flew to his. I had never
realized how bottomless his eyes were – how clear a blue they were. You could
drown in the crystal clarity of them. My lips parted as they seemed to almost
smile at me, though his expression didn’t change and lips remained straight.
“If it works out, promise to make it for me sometime, will you?”
I nodded slowly. “Sure,” I murmured.
His stomach suddenly let out a loud rumble of annoyance. A grin split his
lips, and he said, “See! I’m already hungry for your cooking.”
My lips quirked. “It’s just mad about the recent lack of ramen.”
“Nope. I’m positive it’s pining for your culinary delights.”
I rolled my eyes heavenward, reached out and shoved his chest as an act of
rebuttal. “Don’t you have somewhere to be, Hokage-sama.”
With a step back, he cocked his head to the side and sent me a lighthearted
smile. “That I do. Promise to run into me sometime soon, Sakura-chan?”
“I’ll make no such promise.”
He chuckled as he walked backwards. With a parting dip of his head, he
turned and headed down the hall towards the exit. I watched as he stopped
numerous times to greet patients, visitors, and hospital employees. I shook my
head with a smile and returned back inside the room to clean up the mess.
I spent the next week trying to avoid over-analyzing my feelings. Most of my
time was spent burying myself elbow-deep in hospital work. Although Tsunade
wasn’t the Hokage any longer, she had remained as the temporary head of
the medical unit. She had been very specific about the temporary part. I think
she fully planned on returning to the wandering life she had been enjoying
before being tied to the village years ago.
During the middle of the week, she’d decided to take a small break, and had
left most of the responsibilities of keeping the hospital in working order to
me.
What a nightmare.
Admittedly, it had been a nice distraction from reality, but I didn’t hope
to repeat my slave labor anytime soon. I had almost kissed the ground at
Tsunade’s feet when she had returned earlier this afternoon. But, she had been
kind enough to offer a few days break. I had almost been tempted to refuse the
free time, because I knew I’d just lay around the house and become a victim to
my ever-churning mind, but I knew I needed some kind of down-time from sick and
bleeding people.
I was currently in the small cafeteria in the hospital, my feet propped on
top of the table, my head leaned back, and a cup of steaming coffee cradled in
my hands. I wiggled my toes to ease the ache, and moaned at the heavenliness of
the chair, even though it was a hard, plastic thing that wasn’t very
comfortable. A chair was a chair, and who was I to look a gift-horse in the
mouth?
In hindsight, I guess I shouldn’t have let my guard down, but I was tired.
“Sakura….” I should have run when I heard Ino use that tone with me. It was never
good. However, I did keep my eyes closed, and pretended not to hear her.
“Sakura, I need a favor.”
I sighed. “You and everyone else in the entire village.”
I heard a chair scrape along the linoleum floor. The table jiggled slightly
as she sat down and leaned against it.
“Will you just hear me out?”
I cracked an eye open. “Before details are revealed, what benefit do I get
from a plan I know I’ll most likely dislike?”
A funny look crossed her features, and I knew she had nothing to offer. Just
great. She started to reply, but instead I cut her off with a wave of my hand,
and removed my feet from the table.
“Never mind,” I mumbled. I set the coffee on the table. “What do you need?”
She shifted in her chair. Never a good sign. “Well, it’s not actually for
me, per se.”
I quirked an eyebrow, and over the rim of my coffee cup, I replied dryly,
“I’m shocked.”
“It’s for Lee, actually.”
Now, I hadn’t expected that. “What does he need? And why are you asking me
for him? He’s never had a problem talking to me before.”
Ino sighed. “I need to use him for a mission, his taijutsu skills to be
specific, and since he’s currently tied down with his team, I can’t peel him
away. I was wondering if you’d agree to watch his team for a couple days, so I
can get him agree to go on the mission with me.”
Out of the ninjas our age, only Lee currently had taken on a team of three
genin level ninjas. The others had joined the ANBU or participated in only
jounin-levels missions and ect., and had artfully excused themselves from the
unwanted ”babysitting” duty by arguing they didn’t have the time or patience
yet to deal with young ninjas. Lee seemed to be genuinely excited about his
charges. I hadn’t really heard much about his ninjas, but the thought of
watching over three adolescents didn’t seem like something that would be
relaxing on my days off.
“Can you talk about this mission?” I asked with a frown.
Ino shook her head. “No. But, I can guarantee it won’t be longer than two
days.”
I was torn between the temptation of having something to occupy my thoughts
for the next couple days, and the unwanted prospect of dealing with three
pre-teens who thought they were gods of the universe. I glanced at Ino’s
expectant expression, and cursed myself for being such a sucker.
“Call me after you talk with Lee, and make sure to get the place and time
I’m supposed to rendezvous at with his charges.”
A slow smile spread over Ino’s lips as she visibly slumped against the side
of the table. I watched as her eyes caught my coffee cup, and then lifted
slowly to mine, expectant and greedy at the same time.
I snorted and took a sip. “Get your own, Ino Pig.”
They weren’t actually that bad. For the first day, Lee left
some odd little manuals for them to read and discuss amongst themselves. Their
work ethic was fairly normal for pre-teens – they stared at their assignment
for maybe half an hour, and then decided they had better things to do with
their time. There had only been maybe five occasions during the day when I’d
wanted to give the demons a piece of my mind, but I had contained myself.
To keep their attention for a longer period today (our final day, thank
goodness), I planned on ignoring the training regime that Lee had left (by explaining
I’d lost the itinerary list), and doing something completely different.
Something I thought they would enjoy.
“This is the dumbest thing ever.”
Well, maybe not. I obviously wasn’t psychic.
With a narrow glare, I turned to the short boy with spiky blonde hair. What
was with little blonde kids? Why did they always have to be so damn
opinionated?
“Well, I apologize you’re not having the time of your life.”
The second boy snorted. “I agree with Kisuke. Couldn’t we do something
exciting? Lee-sensei’s manuals were better than this.”
The girl beside me rolled her eyes dramatically and leaned close to me, and
whispered loudly, “Boys.”
I felt like snorting and telling her she had no idea, but merely
quirked my lips in response.
As if he needed to get his point further across, Kisuke stalked up the
roof’s railing where Fuku and I were stooped in front of. “Why in the world
would you think we’d want to sit here and admire older men?” He sounded
utterly disgusted. Put that way, I did feel slightly sorry for him.
“I didn’t bring you here to ‘admire’ anyone. I figured this would be a good
place to get in some actual hands-on practice of all that material you read
about yesterday.”
Kisuke leaned against the railing and sighed heavily. “You’re full of crap.”
I bolted up indignantly, a quick retort on my tongue when Fuku snagged my
skirt and yanked hard while hissing, “He’s looking Sakura-sensei!”
I gave a startled choke and flattened myself to the roof’s concrete. I
clenched my teeth tightly together when I heard him yelling my name from
down below. I could tell he was laughing from even so far above. With a soft
curse, I stood and dusted off my legs before peering over the banister and
smiling weakly down at Naruto.
It had been merely an unfortunate coincidence that he had been assisting in
the construction of the adjacent building. I had only realized he was over
there about a half-hour after we arrived when I heard his familiar burst of
laughter.
I had tried to go through the motions of some basic nin skills, but the
knowledge that Naruto was so close ate away at my attention. Finally, when Fuku
had perched herself by the banister to observe the “construction”, I’d parked
myself down right beside her. Fifteen minutes later, the boys had gotten whiny,
Fuku had gotten stars in her eyes, and I had gotten spotted.
I watched as Naruto waved enthusiastically at me; my answering wave was
pathetic in comparison, but that was because I felt like a moron.
“I’m coming up!” he shouted.
In a sudden panic, I felt all my blood rush to my face. I leaned quickly
over the banister and swung my arms in a wide arc.
“No! No, no, no. It’s a practice session.” I gulped in a deep breath before
I continued shouting. “No outsiders.”
He tilted his head to the side in a puzzled manner, but I could hear the
smile in his voice when he replied, “You sure?”
“Yes!” I practically screamed.
Beside me, Fuku groaned in disappointment. Behind me, the two devils boys
murmured something about the heat being too much for me.
I ignored them, keeping my eyes trained on the familiar blond below. For a
second there, it looked like he was going to just ignore everything I’d just
dictated, and come up to the roof anyways, but one of the construction workers
next to him grabbed his attention and started leading him back into the
building’s half-built infrastructure.
I sank onto the ground beside Fuku and let out a sigh of relief.
I brushed my bangs from my forehead, and murmured, “How would you guys like
to leave, and go get some food?”
They all made wonderful sounds of approval.
“Good. Let’s scram.”
Training-wise, the day was a complete waste, but I do think I redeemed
myself in the eyes of the boys by buying them a ridiculous amount of junk food.
And I couldn’t help but splurge for myself as well. I needed comfort food. When
it was time for the kids to go home for the day, I followed suit, and ended up
passing out on the living sofa after vowing I’d never eat again in my life.
I was sent on a mission the following week – one that I could have done in
my sleep, in all honesty. I was glad to be away that week, however, because it
was the final stretch of days Fai would be in Konoha, and by the time I was
scheduled to return, she’d be long gone, which was a thought that made me grin
like the village idiot.
During the mission, when I wasn’t concentrating on the task at hand, I was
either brooding over my feelings and wondering what the hell I’d gotten myself
into or zoning out and daydreaming about him. It really was quite mortifying to
be caught off in lala-land, thinking about Naruto when another member of the
mission was calling my name or waving their hand in front of my face to get my
attention. I was sure I’d heard them whispering about whether I’d walked into a
tree or something and temporary scrambled my brains.
But while Naruto had been prevalent in my thoughts, I’d come to no
conclusions and hadn’t made any decisions on what I was going to do with
myself. I was still as lost as ever, wading uncertainly through an ocean of doubt
and hesitation.
When my teammates and I arrived back to Konoha after our week-long mission,
I’d made a beeline to my apartment to wash the accumulated dirt from my skin
and hair. I honestly did like running amuck through the trees, but drew the
line of enjoyment at looking like a mud monster with dried, caked mud flaking
off every part of my body. It was hard to even tell what color my clothes were
beneath the grime.
I avoided street traffic by sticking strictly to the roofs. I entered my
apartment through the bedroom window after I finagled the glass open. With a
heavy sigh, I had moved to peel off my shirt when I heard a knock at the front
door.
I was so close to ignoring the person, but instead grumbled with annoyance
as I trudged toward the door, leaving a trail of dirt flakes in my wake. I
skipped looking through the peep-hole and whipped open the door with a scowl on
my face.
I half expected it to be him, but I was surprised find absolutely no one.
Scrunching my brow with confusion, I stepped into the hall, looked both ways,
and still found nothing.
“Moron,” I mumbled under my breath at my phantom visitor.
It wasn’t until I turned around to go back into my apartment that I noticed
the scarlet colored slip of paper attached to my door. With a frown, I snatched
it and closed the door behind me.
My mood plummeted as I read the note addressed to me.
Your presence is requested at the
banquet honoring Hisagi Fai at
8:00pm
tonight at the Border Inn.
- Kiri
My fingers curled uncontrollably around the piece of paper – its color a
perfect match to the hated woman’s hair and long nails. Kiri, Naruto’s
secretary, always liked to play with small, stupid, annoying details like that.
I hurled the note into the sink with a growl and stalked off to the shower to
clean myself up. I nearly burned my skin off with scalding water when I forgot
to adjust the temperature. By the time I’d washed the dirt from my skin,
however, I’d managed to calm myself down a bit.
The mantra I kept repeating to myself was ‘one last time, one last time, one
last time’ to remind myself she’d be leaving soon. I’d honestly thought she
would already be gone, but I had either miscounted the days or she had extended
her stay, the witch.
I spent more time getting ready than I usually did, just so I wouldn’t feel
like a dump next to her sculpted, flawlessly dressed form. As I walked out the
door, with a lid firmly keeping my annoyance in check, I was proud at how calm
I seemed. Kiri let me into the Inn and motioned to where was supposed to go.
The room I stepped into was quite large – big enough to seat fifty people
comfortably, with a long buffet along the wall that smelled so delicious that
my mouth watered. At the end of the room was a semi-circle of floor to ceiling
windows that displayed the surrounding woods beautifully. If the sun had been
out, the scene would have been even more picturesque.
Fai stood next to the entrance, her back to me. Her tinkle of laughter made
my skin crawl and with a grimace, I moved to the windows where I’d be as far
away from her as the room would allow. I didn’t see Naruto, which relieved me.
At least the time she’d use to slather all over him would be cut short.
The room filled up rather quickly. Ino was annoyingly cheerful when she
arrived, but she did manage to keep my attention from drifting to the redhead.
When Naruto did finally arrive, we were taking our seats at the long dinner
table. He flashed me a quick smile that made my stomach flip before he sat down
next to Fai. During the first course, I managed to keep up and participate in
the conversation with those around me.
I was distracted mid-sentence, however, during the serving of the entrée
when Naruto’s burst of laughter filled the room, making my cheeks heat
involuntarily. Ino sent me an odd look and had to give a rough nudge so I’d
continue talking.
I moved to speak, but the words died a swift death in my mouth when I heard
Fai utter, “I’m trying to convince Hokage-sama to be one of the few to escort me
home.” She turned her beguiling gaze to him, her lashes fluttering. “I just
know you’d love it.” Even from my place at the other end of the table, I could
catch the intimate heat in her gaze. I expected Naruto to at least seem a
little uncomfortable, but he merely smiled innocently and reached over to place
a hand on her shoulder. He was either the densest man in the universe when it
came to recognizing solicitations, or very skilled at acting like he was the
densest man in the universe.
“So kind of you, Fai. But, I just can’t leave,” he replied.
Fai visibly deflated. If I hadn’t hated her so much, I might felt sorry for
her. Instead, I felt like celebrating Naruto’s ability to push her away. But,
then every cell in my body froze as I watched her slide her hand underneath the
table. From Naruto’s mildly surprised expression, I’d have to surmise she had
placed her hand on his knee – thankfully nothing incredibly indecent. However,
it still felt as if the room was suddenly smaller, too hot, too bright, too everything.
Jealousy was evil monster whose claws I had managed to stay relatively free
of until recently. Sure, I’d felt green with envy before, and Ino and I had had
our spats, but this was nothing compared to that. Those deadly claws
twisted in my chest now, making it hard to even breathe.
I turned my gaze to the white, lacy tablecloth to reel back some composure.
I mumbled a hasty excuse to Ino as I shoved back from the table. I could feel
the surprised gaze of some guests on my back as I hurried out of the room. It
wasn’t until I stepped outside, and my vision began to gray around the edges
that I realized I was holding my breath. I sucked in a deep breath of the night
air as I walked away from the Inn, not caring which direction I went.
As my eyes scanned the night shrouded forest, I felt the tenacious grip of
jealousy slip slowly away, my mind calmed by the solitude. With a tumultuous
sigh, I moved forward through the trees, allowing the blackness to form a
welcome shield around me. With each step, I moved farther away from the root of
my anger, away from the source of my tension. My indignation began to wither,
and gradually, those overwhelming feelings melted into a puddle of mush. And in
the end, I just felt utterly retarded and childish.
When would I ever grow up? I felt like I was a teenager again, in the midst
if my first soul-searching crush. Everything shouldn’t have to revolve around
Naruto; I shouldn’t feel as if I’m about to explode in anger whenever my enemy
did something I didn’t approve of or like. And why was I even thinking of Fai
as my enemy?
Like the thirteen-year-old my brain thought I was, I suddenly flashed back
to that manicured hand running across Naruto’s bare arm, and involuntary
clenched my teeth.
I blinked and cleared my thoughts. Boy, I sure was getting nowhere fast. Why
did I always end up thinking circles around myself, not focusing on what I
needed to be agonizing about. Fai should be the least of my worries. Was I
going to do this with every woman who showed Naruto the smallest amount of
affection?
But, the most important question I needed to ask myself was what I planned
on doing with my feelings. When did I plan on telling him how I felt?
I snorted as I sat down on a fallen log and turned my gaze to the sky. I
wondered how many years that would take me? Two? Ten? Fifty?
I sighed warily and muttered, “I need a new brain.”
“Want mine?”
It was ridiculous how close I came to screaming. Some ninja I am.
With my heart thundering in my chest, I turned to glare at Naruto’s chipper
face and hissed, “Why don’t you just stab me with a kunai?”
His expression slacked into adorable confusion. “What?”
“You scared the crap out of me. If you plan on murdering me, do it
quick instead of making my heart do somersaults. Idiot!”
He was smiling by the time I finished, amused at my irritation. “Sorry,” he
replied softly as he sank down beside me on the log.
I turned my gaze away from his searching eyes, and glared at the sky.
“Why’d you leave?” I asked.
“Why’d you leave?” he retorted. I could hear the smile in his words.
“It was just…really…stuffy,” I managed lamely.
He made a sound of understanding deep in his throat, and said, “I was just
bored.”
I snorted in response, and couldn’t help the quirking of my lips. I was
about to ask about what exactly he thought was so boring when he made a sound
of disappointment, and murmured, “I don’t see it.”
I slid him a wary glance. “What?”
“There are too many clouds.”
I looked up at the blackness, noticing for the first time that the stars were
completely hidden. I could just barely make out the hazy grayness of the
hovering clouds. “What exactly don’t you see?” I questioned, curious.
“The Mighty Frog.”
He said it so matter-of-factly that I had hard time trying to keep the urge
to laugh at bay.
“There’s no frog up there, Naruto.”
“Oh, yes, there is.”
“No, there isn’t.”
He made an odd noise in the back of his throat, and slid his fingers around
my forearm to make me look at him. “It has this huge tongue sticking out of its
mouth, and it takes up like a fourth of the sky. It’s impossible not to see it,
Sakura-chan.”
“Did you make him up yourself?”
He nudged my side and frowned. “Of course not. Jiraiya showed him to me
years ago.”
I sputtered with laughter. “I should have known.”
He grinned bemusedly at me. “You still don’t believe me?”
I shook my head with a wide smile.
“If the clouds weren’t there, I’d happily show you.”
“I know you would.”
He sighed heavily and stood up from the log. I watched with surprise as he
lowered himself onto the ground and laid back on the leaves. He muttered
something unintelligible under his breath and crossed his arms behind his head,
allowing them serve as a makeshift cushion.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m just going to sit here until the clouds part, so I can show you The
Mighty Frog.”
“And what if the clouds don’t part?”
“They will.” He paused for a moment, then ticked his gaze over to mine.
“You’ll have a better view over here.”
I hesitated for a moment, and then sighed. He humphed with approval when I
settled down beside him on the ground, and turned to look up at…well,
absolutely nothing.
“We should remember this place for our next sky-gazing escapade. Maybe we’ll
see something another day,” I said.
His laughter was a soft rumble. “We’ll see something tonight.” He seemed so
sure of himself. If I hadn’t gotten the night’s weather report of ‘completely
cloudy’, I might have actually believed him.
The silence that surrounded us as we stared blindly at the sky was
surprisingly comfortable. He was intent as he willed the clouds to part; I had
to bite my lip to keep from smiling. I fidgeted occasionally to re-sort the
leaves poking my back. It was minutes later when a facetious thought came to
me. I argued myself out of acting on it at first, but then I just gave into my vicious
mind.
“So did Jiraiya ever show you The Super Slug?”
Naruto’s eyes were bright with excitement when he asked, “There’s a Super
Slug?”
If I had responded immediately, I would have burst into irrepressible
laughter, so instead I managed a weak nod, which unfortunately still made him
suspicious.
“You’re lying to me aren’t you?” he asked with a narrowed gaze.
“No,” I wheezed out.
“Are you going to show it to me?” he asked, still guarded.
“Uh, of course.” I would have to make sure he pointed out his frog first, so
I could make sure the slug wouldn’t overlap.
He eyed me for several moments before turning away and muttering something
about his frog being real under his breath.
He had only been silent for about minute when he spoke next. “So how big is
this slug?”
And I grinned.
I woke in an odd position, and I couldn’t feel my left arm.
I always hated that. For a moment I always panicked, wondering if somehow I’d
lost it during the , but very true.
With a wince, I pulled my arm out from under the thing restraining it, and
flexed my fingers as needles of awareness stabbed by nerves. I started to shift
my torso to get into a more comfortable position – I really was twisted in a
contortionist kind of way – when I heard an animal like growl in my ear. My
eyes flew wide open, and I forgot to breathe for moment. I only had a cat at
home, and I’d never heard him make such a deep sound before in my life. And
then I realized I wasn’t at home.
I was still in the woods.
I’d spent the night sleeping in the leaves.
With Naruto.
My first impulse was to bolt upright, and put much space between me, and the
warm body that made funny noises. But with a deep inhalation of breath, I
managed to stay still.
He was on his back; I was on my side. His shoulder pillowed my head, while
his arms curled around my upper body. I could see his chest rising and falling
evenly as he breathed, though I wasn’t able to see his face. My arm had
apparently been crushed by his torso, which explained why the circulation had
been cut off. My hair slipped slowly into my eyes, and I huffed softly with
annoyance.
I cannot believe what a moron I am. How on earth had I fallen asleep so
easily?
Naruto made that odd noise again, and I felt like rolling my eyes with
exasperation. I held my breath as I shifted, pressed my hands down onto the
ground, and slowly sat up. At first, it seemed as if my change in position had
no effect on him – his breathing remained even, his face slack and devoid of the
troubles of the world. But, when I pushed back a little more, scraped my knee
on a poorly placed rock, and let out a soft, but distinctive expletive, his
eyes opened, groggy and unfocused. Advantageous
I froze, my heart beating rapidly, and prayed that he’d just sink back into
sleep. When he blinked and the fogginess began to clear from his vision, I
cursed my bad luck, and I cursed the damn rock on the ground. If I found it
later, I planned on throwing somewhere. Far. And hard.
At first, Naruto just looked confused and disoriented. I’m sure seeing me
looming over him wasn’t something he’d expected. In fact, I’m quite sure it
intimidated him a little. Or at least I hoped it did, I thought sadistically.
After a few moments, the confusion blended with curiosity, and he lifted a
hand to run through his already disheveled hair.
“Good morning?” he said in a questioning tone.
“Ah, yeah. Good morning,” I mumbled back, averting my gaze.
He sat up gradually, letting the last vestiges of sleep fall away. We were
side by side when he was fully upright, though facing opposite directions.
My mind was reeling for something to say. Anything. I’d never been so
tongue-tied in my life. Words stuck to my throat, and thoughts rattled around
in my mind like ping pong balls. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw him turn
his head toward mine. My heart beat a staccato rhythm at the proximity, and it
took all my strength to keep staring ahead at the tree lines. I vainly tried to
focus on the bark of the tree not far away. Admire the brilliance. The strength
of it. Its blond hair. Wait, trees don’t have hair. Damnit, I can’t even admire
a tree without thinking of Naruto.
“Next time,” he murmured softly in a teasing tone that I knew meant bad
news, “can you be the pillow, instead of me?”
At first I didn’t think I’d heard him right, but then my eyebrows slammed
together, and I whipped around to face him, my face bright red with outraged
indignation. “Who said there would a next time!”
He grinned cheekily, and gave a one-shouldered shrug. “Why wouldn’t there
be?”
“Am I missing something?”
He leaned closer, if that was even a possibility. “What do you think you
could be missing?”
“Don’t be cute.”
Oh, God he was so close. I could see the stubble on his face, the hint of lines
beside his eyes that bespoke of amusement, the swirl of brightness in his blue
gaze. I was so close to breaking, to saying to hell with it all, and letting my
impulses be my guide.
“You think I’m cute.”
“That’s not – I didn’t…don’t put words into my mouth,” I stuttered.
“But, that’s what you said,” he persisted, cocking his head to the side.
“No, I didn’t!”
“That’s what I heard.”
“Then you’re hard of hearing,” I snapped. I suddenly hoped my anger would
blind me to the sudden desire of running my fingers through his hair.
Naruto sighed, and leaned back the slightest amount. Without thinking, I
leaned forward to makeup for his movement. A slow smile slipped over his lips,
lightening his whole features.
“If I’m not cute, then what I am?”
It would have been so easy the snarl back at him, to let his teasing roll
off my shoulders like I had always let it, and then hit him over the head in a
teasing, yet serious sort of way. But, for some reason, I actually thought
about his question, and felt my ears begin to burn with awkwardness.
Anything my mind came up with was too sappy, too inappropriate, too
ridiculous to say aloud, and I was afraid I would just end up humiliating
myself. So I gave into the urge that had gripped me ever since his eyes had
opened and he had looked at me with that lazy inquisitiveness that made my
blood simmer with something I dare not describe.
Without a further thought, I reached out, clasped his head between my two
hands, and leaned forward to press lips against his. I didn’t feel the proverbial
fireworks, or the splash of blinding color behind my closed eyelids. But, when
the shock drained from his limbs, and a hand came up to cradle the back of my
neck, something much better washed over my senses – something completely
indescribable. When I gasped and he deepened the kiss, I sank against him, my
arms going around his neck, my tongue trying to follow his in a dance I had
never perfected, had never wanted to until now. I felt giddy and dizzy and
nervous. My heart throbbed uncontrollably, and I felt like my stomach had
turned inside out. Nothing had made me feel more alive in my life.
I tilted my head to slant my lips over his at an angle, and felt a wave of
tingles shimmer down my spine. This was more than an exploration of mouths,
lips, tongues, and teeth. It was more than the base desires that rooted and
flamed within my body.
This was Naruto. This was my best friend, my confidante, my former teammate,
my punching bag. This man was more important to me than any other.
The silky feeling of his mouth along my lips made my toes curl, my skin
warm, my ardor intense. My hands slipped down from his shoulders, over his
chest, and tightened on the fabric of his thin shirt. I followed him as he
slowly leaned further back until his back was against the ground, and I was
pressed against his chest. My hair fell into his face, but if he noticed, he
gave no sign. I sighed against his lips, before slipping my lips more fully
over his tangling my tongue with his. I had lost all semblance of reason at that
point, overwhelmed with the knowledge of who this was beneath me, what we were
doing, and how utterly delicious it felt. Naruto groaned softly, his hands on
my waist, his fingers grazing the skin of my waist.
A snap in the distance filtered slowly into my brain, and echoed softly. The
knowledge that there was something out there in woods, perhaps watching us,
made me suddenly uneasy. Naruto must have heard it was well, for he gently
pushed me away just as I broke contact with him. We were both breathing heavily,
still caught up in the emotions that the kiss had evoked. I looked away from
Naruto and toward the direction where the intrusive sound had emanated from
just in time to see a small white rabbit hop into the clearing, sniff, and then
disappear back into the brush.
When I glanced back at Naruto, his eyes were still on the spot the rabbit
had just vacated. After a few moments, he turned his head back to mine, a half
smile gracing his lips. He reached up, and brushed some of my hair back behind
my ear.
He chuckled. “You’re cheeks are as red as apples.”
I’m not quite sure why, but for some reason that comment caught me off
guard, and made me bristle with offense. Maybe it was because I was on sensory
overload, or maybe it was because I was instinctually trying to put distance
between the two of us, even though that was the last thing I actually wanted to
do. I slammed by brows together with annoyance, pushed myself to feet, and
glared down at Naruto with eyes sparking with frustration.
“Don’t make fun of me!”
I spun on my heel, the image of Naruto’s acute bewilderment burned into my
mind. I had only taken a few steps when I heard him rise hastily to his feet
and hurry after me.
“Sakura-chan!”
I kept going, even though I had the strongest urge to stop.
“Sakura!”
I wasn’t surprised when he suddenly skidded to a stop in front of me, his
expression slightly panicked. I moved to side-step him, but he was too quick,
and dodged my attempt of escape.
“I’m not making fun of you,” he was quick to tell me. “I –,” he sucked in a
deep breath, “I…please don’t misunderstand me.”
He lowered his head a split second, then grabbed my wrist tightly, and
raised his shirt with his other hand. My lips parted with surprise, and I
watched as he pressed my hand against the bare skin of his chest.
“What are you - ”
“Do you feel that? I’m so nervous. So unwound.” His heart was beating so
fast, I had to wonder if he was close to having a heart attack. I opened my
mouth to order him to take a deep breath, but he continued, “It gets like this
every time you’re around.” His eyes were so earnest when they caught mine.
Desperate. Uneasy. Intense. “You always seem so put together, and I feel as if
I’m falling apart every time I’m with you.”
In response to his words, to the feel of his heart beating a rapid race
beneath my fingertips, I felt my own heart accelerate. My palms began to sweat,
and I suddenly had the urge to sit down to keep my knees from giving out on me.
They felt like jelly.
And, suddenly, I knew that this wasn’t something that I could run or hide
from even if I wanted to, which I knew I didn’t. Far from it. I wanted to let
the feelings currently surfacing to envelope me with their foreign, yet
familiar brilliance. I knew I’d never be the same after this. Naruto had
captured my very being, not just my heart. Though I hadn’t realized it, I had
lost to him long ago. So long ago.
I wanted this. I wanted this so badly.
I clenched my free hand to keep from reaching out and threading my fingers
through his messy blond hair.
He looked thoroughly bemused at the moment, his eyebrows pinched, his mouth
straight, his eyes slightly clouded. I knew he wanted me to respond. He wanted
some kind of reassurance, something that would broaden the slim slip of hope
curling in his eyes. This new connection between the two of us so fragile, and
could be broken so easily.
I pulled my hand out from beneath his and away from the hopeful pounding in
his chest. With my fingertips, I gripped the top of his pant pockets, and I
lowered my face to his shoulder. His scent was warm, earthy, and achingly
familiar. I turned my head and pressed my nose to his neck, my breath hot on
his skin.
“My heart’s beating just a fast,” I whispered softly.
His hands trailed up my sides to my upper shoulders. With a gentle, yet firm
grip, he pushed me away from him. His eyes snared mine, and my breath caught at
dark navy they had deepened to. They were rich with emotion – threaded through
with a tangle affection, pleasure, and longing. I could have drowned in them.
He trailed the fingers of one hand along my cheekbone, and then down the
side of my neck. My chest felt so tight, so full. All those childhood dreams of
finding the one, and those expectations, hopes, and wishes paled in comparison
to the reality.
I had the sudden urge to hunt down Fai, and childishly stick out my tongue.
My lips curled at the thought, and Naruto quirked an questioning eyebrow. I
merely shook my head in response.
With a slow smile, I leaned forward, stood on my tip-toes, and pressed a
quick kiss to the corner his mouth.
“If weather permits, meet me out here tonight. You still haven’t gotten the
chance to show me The Mighty Frog.”
His hands grabbed my upper arms to keep me from moving too far away from
him. “I won’t be free until late.”
“I don’t get off from the hospital until late,” I countered.
“Could you bring some food?”
“Food?”
“I get hungry at night,” he
said almost defensively.
“You’re always hungry.
Admit it.”
He remained stubbornly
mute. And then his stomach growled.
My lips curved sardonically
and against his lips, I laughed.
We did meet there that
night. Ate. Argued. Let ourselves become acquainted with the new avenue of our
confusing relationship. I’d be remiss to say it’s been all kisses and roses,
smiles and tickles since then – but, really, what would I do if I couldn’t
argue or bate him. Punch him or tease him mercilessly. He’s the only person who
can piss me off so thoroughly that I can’t speak in coherent sentences. And
conversely, he’s the only one who can thaw the heat of my anger and melt me
into a breathless puddle of nerves. Perfection is overrated anyways. I’d much
rather pick my way uncertainly through this overwhelming bond with him than
fall into a boring routine of monotony and predictability.
I’ve fallen into the habit
of sitting beside the bed and watching him as he sleeps. I smiled into my
steaming coffee and took a cautious sip, my eyes never leaving his tousled
frame. He snored loudly. Drool pooled on the sheet below his head – he had
knocked the pillow onto the floor in the middle of the night. With my foot, I
reached up and stabbed him in the side with my toes. He cut off mid-snore and
slowly cracked open one bleary eye to glare in my direction.
“Meghn,” he groaned into
the mattress.
I grinned. “Pardon? I don’t
speak mumble.”
Naruto grunted and lifted
his torso off the bed slightly. With sleepy eyes and disheveled hair, he
repeated, “Mean.”
I remained stubbornly
silent in response and merely quirked an eyebrow. I set my coffee mug down on
the nightstand and watched as he twisted lazily onto his back, his breath
whooshing out with a heavy sigh. I barely had enough time to admire his bare
chest before I decided that I want to be closer – I wanted the feel his warmth.
Quickly, I snuck onto the edge of the bed, and wedged myself against his prone
form. He watched me with half a smile, and silently curled an arm around me to
hold me tightly against him. I lowered my head down slightly to catch the lazy
mutter of words he whispered. “Stay with me.”
I knew he was merely
expressing his want for me to remain nestled against him for the time being –
before he had to wake up fully and go back to the tedious work of the Hokage. But
now, in this moment, I take it to mean forever. To stay with him until I can no
longer physically. I smiled to myself and wondered how I got to be such a
cheesy sap, and I almost rolled my eyes.
But, instead, I leaned down
and against his lips I told him, “In anger and affection – I’ll stay.”