Hello!

Welcome to the Lazy Authoress' Nook. I'm Orangefyre, a former Quizilla writer who got fed up with the overzealous moderation... And thus, here I am! Check out the page.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Tumblr Blog

Alright kids, there are only two stories up right now, but my Tumblr is entirely brand new, certified Orangefyre content, and it leads to a set of short stories by some very talented people that you should totally read. They all take place in the same restaurant, and yours truly contributed an 8-page spread as well.

Check it out! Orangefyre Rocks the Writing Scene

And to gel with the whole restaurant theme, some wisdom from Miss Piggy of the Muppets:


"After all the trouble you go to, you get about as much actual “food” out of eating an artichoke as you would from licking 30 or 40 postage stamps."

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Aqua Academy for the Socially Inept {1}


Aqua de Joia Academy—Aqua for short—is technically a school for socially impaired geniuses, but it’s built more like an indoor water park with an obstacle course tacked on for good measure. The school is circular, kind of like a big donut, with walkways in the center around the dorm rooms and club offices and another ring of walkways around the outside for visiting families and students coming back from field trips. On that ring there are a few kiosks for the school paper, The Orb, and some of the most popular clubs, like the Water Polo club. That one’s a big pull for the really wealthy families, since the word ‘polo’ automatically means higher-echelon, elite society.

We’ll discuss those guys later.

Between the two rings is a huge obstacle course over an enormous pool—ten feet deep all the way around. Every thirty feet there’s an ‘island’ that connects to the inner ring, complete with life guards and those annoying rope separators that keep everyone in an orderly line as they head onto the course for the day’s classes.

My mom and dad had just dropped me off, and I was standing on the outer ring, my duffle bag hoisted over my shoulder, when a class started running the course just in front of me. Their teacher, an athletic, pretty young woman in a wetsuit, waved them through the rope divider one at a time. The first obstacle was a big inflatable thing like a climbing wall and inclined like a slide, but there were no hand-or-foot-holds, just two straps that ran to the top. One of the students grabbed one in each hand and started walking up, pulling himself as he went. From his red cheeks, I could tell this was not even remotely easy, but he was making good progress, and another student started before he was even halfway up.

“Miss Gertrude Agnes Steinmetz?” A tap on my shoulder and a voice at my ear woke me out of my slack-jawed gawking. There was no way I was going to survive even one obstacle on that course.

“Huh? You can call me Gerty,” I stuck a hand out to the woman who’d said my name. She looked at my hand, her own occupied with a clipboard clasped lovingly to her chest. I took my hand back.

“I am Mrs. Pattinson, the school liaison. Everything is in order… However,”  she paused and sniffed delicately. “Your assigned roommate is at the moment difficult to locate. Follow me, please.”

I scurried to keep up as the harpy in high heels clacked along ahead of me, still cradling my enrollment information. “Where are we going? Hey, slow down!” I huffed and puffed to keep up, my duffle bag slapping the fronts of my thighs. I’ll admit to being chubby and asthmatic, but this woman was just plain evil, walking so fast. I mean, I was carrying most of my life in my bag, while she just had a piece of particle board and a few sheets of paper.

Ignoring me in the time-honored manner of wicked boarding-school mistresses everywhere, Mrs. Pattinson strode across a bridge to the central part of the building. My braid was still slapping against my back as I struggled to keep up with her. I wasn’t used to any form of physical exertion, since I’d spent most of my life in front of a computer, but not everyone is athletic and I’m certainly not.

Just then, with an exaggerated shriek, a guy on the course above us fell off, arms flapping, and landed with a sploosh in the water. A tidal wave lapped over the side of the bridge and onto my shins, soaking through my sneakers and socks. The guy, buoyed by a bright yellow life vest, swam for the side, spitting chlorinated water like a broken fountain while I stared miserably down at my brand-new Reeboks, bought specially for my first day. They weren’t ruined, but the chlorine would probably bleach the red linings and dye the whole shoe pink.

Mrs. Pattinson hadn’t stopped, so I had to run double-time to meet her at the elevator door. She gave me the obligatory glower for being so remiss as to get wet, even if it wasn’t my fault, and stepped inside as the silver doors slid open.

As the door closed, another kid fell off the obstacle course and landed on the bridge. Amazingly, he bounced up and sprinted towards us.  “Hey, hold the elevator!”

I stuck my arm out and the doors jumped back open as the guy got in, his dark hair plastered to his forehead—he must have fallen earlier; it still looked wet. I checked his legs to make sure they were both bending in the right places, which they were, so he was apparently unhurt after falling ten feet onto concrete. He was wearing elbow and knee pads, as well as the life vest everyone seemed to have except me and Mrs. Pattinson.

“Mr. Reese, how did you manage to fail a checkpoint? I’m surprised one of the graduates didn’t grab you.”

“Ha, nah, Judy Trenor threw me over for holding up the line.”

“The new student is confused,” I said aloud, looking to the boy, because I was certain Mrs. Pattinson would just ignore me.

He grinned. He was a thick-set, big guy, probably a few years younger than I was, judging by the pimples and disproportionate limbs.  I doubted he had his driver’s license, despite his height. Built like a wrestler, his torso was as wide as a house, with the enormous tree trunk-legs and head-sized biceps to match. He was pudgy though, and he kept squinting, so I guessed he wore glasses when he wasn’t running the course.

“Ms. Trenor will be dealt with. Professor Zenma will not tolerate bullying, even from the captain of the freestyle team.”

I’d been distracted by studying Mr. Reese, so I was surprised when Mrs. Pattinson said something, and jumped accordingly. The guy laid a big paw on my shoulder and smiled down at me. “I’m Ulrich Reese. I’m in the second class.”

“I’m in the fourth.” I was right; he was younger than I was. The second class was mainly sixteen-year-olds, sophomores in a regular high school. I was in the equivalent of a high school senior in age, but my class was made up of students who had their Bachelor’s Degree in whatever field they’d chosen. For me, it was a BA in investigative journalism on top of a doctorate in creative writing. “What’s your field? I’m a writer.”

“I was working on my Bachelor’s degree in business management when I took a leave of absence to come here. I figure my job will still be there when I get back.”

My eyebrows scrunched together. “Where do you work?”

“There’s a little company in Silicon Valley that’s really eager to have me. I figured some time in a place like this would make the difference—I mean, we’re all young here, but there I’ll be a little kid compared to all the other office managers. Having people skills will be a huge asset.”

“I thought my reason was big,” I said. “My parents just wanted me to be less introverted.”

“You don’t seem that way,” Ulrich said with another smile. “You’ve been talking to me for a few minutes already.”

“I mean with regular people, people my own age. They make me nervous. My name’s Gerty.” I shook his hand, taking it off my shoulder as I did so. Whatever Ulrich had been like before, he was really nice now, and seemed in control of the situation, like just being with all these other geniuses had made him better, more able to deal with normal people. I needed that ease, that kind of self-assured way of speaking and thinking that made my I.Q. invalid. Brains are useless if you can’t figure out how to share your knowledge with someone else.

“I’m heading back to the beginning of the course to try again. I think I can beat Judy’s time, if I just start off with enough momentum.” He started out of the elevator and waved goodbye over his shoulder. I waited to see if this was our floor; Mrs. Pattinson hit another button and we began to go down.

“Wait, did we go past our floor?”

“Yes, but I decided a short conversation with Mr. Reese would put you more at ease. He’s doing well in our program, even if he isn’t the best swimmer. His times on the obstacle course are reasonably high, and he has a few good friends—Dennis Lo, Keith Decker, and Robert Schwinn, one of your classmates.”

“Who’s Robert Schwinn?”

“I doubt you’ve seen him. His classes don’t start until noon; he spends mornings in his room. He’s a robotics savant if I’ve ever seen one, perhaps even on par with Professor Zenma himself. A number of very powerful electronics companies want him, but he hasn’t signed on with anyone yet. He’s been here for three years.”

My eyebrows leapt up. “He’s been here that long?”

“Robert—“ I noticed she didn’t call him ‘Mr. Schwinn’—“stays on to hone his social skills and practice his art. We have a lot of successful students who stay simply because they dislike standard curriculums and prefer our methods.”

We stopped in front of one of the many doors in the middle of the central column. Mrs. Pattinson knocked with one knuckle. “Bellisima?”

“Yes, who is it?”

Mrs. Pattinson opened the door without answering. Inside, a girl was sprawled over an old-time fainting couch, mascara smudged dramatically over her high cheekbones, a handkerchief raised to one eye. “Bellisima, these hysterics are terrible for your complexion and your class scores. Please pull yourself together and say hello to your new roommate.”

“I don’t want her! I miss Stacy!”

“Anastacia Lombardo.” Mrs. Pattinson said over her shoulder to me. “A reasonably good singer, but as a costume designer, incomparable.” A wet handkerchief struck her on the cheek. Bellisima sniffed loudly.

“She was an amazing singer! Better than that hack Mary Sable!”

“Mary Sable has several CDs in production and has starred in two off-Broadway musicals. Miss Lombardo had trouble securing one self-produced single.” Mrs. Pattinson’s sigh-riddled voice sent Bellisima into another tirade of weeping. Mrs. Pattinson rubbed her forehead. “I’ll leave you two to become acquainted. I have a migraine.” She swept from the room in a fairly theatrical way herself, and the door shut with a sense of finality behind her.

I put my duffle bag down soundlessly, as any noise could send Bellisima into another crying fit. “I’m Gerty Steinmetz. Did your friend graduate?”

Raising tear-stained eyes to mine, Bellisima flung a hand to her brow. “She did, but she wanted to stay longer! She wouldn’t leave me so easily! Her parents must have forced her!”

“Uhm, maybe she got a job making costumes? Mrs. Pattinson said—“

“That witch doesn’t know anything! Waaaaaaaaaaah…” Off she went again, wailing and sobbing.

Nobody I’d ever known had cried so much or so loudly. “Can’t you email each other? Don’t you have a phone?”

“It’s not the same!”

“You should be happy for her, though. We’re not supposed to stay at this school forever.” Use your logic, I thought, flopping down in a beanbag chair.

“That’s Stacy’s!”

“Aaah!” I leapt up at her screech, startled, and my braid whacked my butt hard enough to sting. “Oh, for the love of Pete, will you quit it? She graduated! She’s not dead! You scared me half to death!” I don’t remember ever being angry before, since I was so secure in my intellectual superiority in regular school, but this girl was getting on my nerves like nobody ever had before. If I had to listen to her gripe one more minute, I would throw her over the railing outside. “Are you done?”

“Well, I figured out how to make you mad.” She smiled up at me and swept the mascara off her face with a spectacular flourish. “I’m Bellisima. Can you guess what I’m here for?”

I glared at her from under my bangs. “That was all an act?”

“Bingo, bingo, bingo! I’m an actor!” Bellisima bounced up and winked at me, before she hopped the low couch and pranced to the dresser to reapply her makeup. “I only use waterproof mascara, which should have been your first clue… If a girl wears normal stuff around here, she looks like she’s the Wicked Witch of the West in five minutes—all melty and junk. You get dunked at least once a day, if not by falling off than from somebody deciding you’re too slow and giving you the big chuck.”

“Some girl named Judy Trenor threw a guy off the course as we were coming up here. Ulrich Reese?”

“Second year student. Nice guy, but he has trouble keeping up on the speed course. He does better on the rhythm trials.”

“New student is still confused.”

“We have several different types of courses. The big course outside is the master course—we run it at least every day, and your times decide where your grades are. Outside there are other courses with different guidelines and different tasks to accomplish. Timed trials are speed courses where you compete for the best time. The lowest times get A’s, the middle times get B’s, so on and so forth. The rhythm courses test your ability to problem solve and guess the pattern that helps you get across the course. For instance, an obstacle may involve jumping at a certain time to get through.”

I grabbed my bag. “I’m here to learn to get along better with other people, not fall to my death running through a maze like a giant hamster.”

“We learn teamwork and how to push ourselves. We’re also allowed to decide when we’d like to take our regular classes and when we’d like ‘studio time’—basically just a time of day when we work on what we’re good at, in my case acting. You and Mrs. Pattinson walked in on the best sob scene I’ve ever put together on short notice. I thought Mrs. Pattinson was going to take you away again to let me calm down.” Bellisima grinned and applied a last dab of pink lip-gloss. “If you want to go, you can, but regular school isn’t half as much fun is Aqua. I mean, at other schools getting mono is big, but here it’s being bitten by a snapping turtle.”

“Wait, there are snapping turtles?”

“Oh, not here, they’re in one of the field zones. Uhm, we’re going there tomorrow, so you might want to wear hand guards… Snapping turtles apparently like the taste of appendages.”

I clapped a hand to my forehead. “It didn’t say anything about that in the brochure. It mentioned light exercise and an obstacle course. There were no serial killer reptiles mentioned.”

Bellisima laughed. “As a rule, really intelligent kids don’t much appreciate exercise. We’re used to getting what we want using our brains. Professor Zenma believes that the key to achieving a healthy social life and a healthy mental life lies in balancing the two. So we need to work on our bodies, basically.”

“What about the kids who come here for sports?”

“Generally the courses are just as hard for them. It’s just the academic courses that give them trouble, not the physical ones, although the obstacle runs are challenging for even the most conditioned athlete. Judy Trenor, the girl who chucked Ulrich off the course, is being groomed for a career in lacross, so she has an easier time on the obstacle course than he does. Ulrich, however, has better grades in the regular classes. Oh, another thing? You usually don’t have to be in the classroom—only on days when the teachers ask specifically for you to attend, like if an essay is due. That stuff’s announced over the loud speaker every morning.”

I felt my own migraine coming on and sat on what I guessed was my bed, since the top bunk was covered in printed pillows and stuffed animals. I pulled my own stuffed giraffe out of my bag and tucked her into the blankets. “I think I need a nap.”

“Everybody says that when they first get the 411,” Bellisima continued, tossing a fluffy purple quilt over the couch. “It’s a lot to take in, and your first run on the obstacle course will be really hard. A nap would be a good idea—I’ll wake you up when it’s time for the afternoon run. I’ll walk you through it, and if somebody tries to throw you off, I’ll throw them off!”

“Uh, thanks.”

“What are roommates for? Stacy used to do that stuff for me all the time when I first got here. I figure as the senior dormie it’s my job to keep you out of the nurse’s office as much as possible. Anyway, I’ll turn my laptop speakers off so I can IM Stacy without disturbing you.” Hopping over the couch again, the apparently part-rabbit Bellisima sat down and began typing.

Monday, March 21, 2011

BLEACH: 10 Minutes in Heaven {Shinigami Heaven *Part One*} Shuhei Hisagi


 69

 “Uhm, Rangiku, I don’t know if you know this, but 69 isn’t a word.”

“It works just as well,” Shuhei Hisagi says from where he’s sitting. “You got me, _______.” He stands up, and you find yourself admiring deliciously bare arms from where you’re standing. Shuhei blushes faintly and rubs the back of his head when he realizes you’re practically salivating.

“Sorry about that…” You say, trying to laugh it off. “What can I say? You’re fun to look at!”

“That’s my girl!” Gran yells from the floor.

You glare at her, blush yourself, and run for the closet like you’ve been set on fire. The Lieutenant of the 9th Division has been your crush practically since you were old enough to know what a boy was. Shuhei had even helped Gran train you when you’d first become aware of your spiritual powers. Of course, being seventeen and stuck for ten hours a day with a handsome, often shirtless, instructor hadn’t been the best for your sanity, but you’d pummeled quite a few dummies while trying not to stare.

Shuhei steps through the door and shuts it behind himself. “Rangiku just would have slammed it.” He moves in front of you and you reach out a hand to shake. It had been a while since you’d been alone long enough to talk.

Unfortunately, due to height difference, the proffered hand hit a certain portion of Shuhei’s anatomy that you had had no intention of going anywhere near. Shuhei, however, didn’t know that, and couldn’t care less, since he was crouched on the floor cursing.

“Oh my God, Shuhei, I’m so sorry, I didn’t realize I was so much shorter, oh crap, I’m sorry!”

“I’m fine,” Shuhei grunts, gritting his teeth. “That really hurt.”

“I’m sorry! Oh geez, I’d better go get some ice…”

“That’s an even worse idea!” When he whispered to you why, your face just about spontaneously combusted.

After a shaky start, you kneel in front of Shuhei (who, in turn, is kneeling in front of you) and rub the back of your neck sheepishly. “I’m really sorry. If I’d been thinking…”

He shakes his head. “You probably still would have figured out a way to cause me physical torment. You’re good at that.”

“What do you mean?” You ask, an eyebrow raised.

“While I was training you. Do you know how hard it was not to just go over and hold you? You were my student, for God’s sake, but that didn’t seem to matter. You were seventeen. I was robbing a cradle.”

“Well, you’re not now!” You answer, much faster than you’d intended.

Shuhei’s head shot up. “You mean you actually… I wasn’t imagining that you were staring at me?”

You want to kick yourself, but seeing as it is anatomically impossible, you content yourself with a few choice swear words. “Yes, I stared at you. All the time. I couldn’t stop. Everything about you… I was totally hooked. I still am. Why do you think I spend so much time here, rather than the human world?”

“I… I can’t. You were my student, and you’re young. I can’t expect you to pick one world over another or to even know what love is.”

“Don’t act like you’re a bazillion years older than me, Shuhei. You don’t want to get involved because you don’t love me.”

“What kind of stupid idea is that? I love you more than anything—“ he bit his lip.

“I see you found your answer.” You say, unable to keep the triumph out of your voice.

Shuhei growls with frustration and drags a hand through his spiky black hair. “You’re infuriating.” With that, his mouth captures yours.

His arms sweep around your back, riding low on your hips, his fingers slipping gently beneath your top to brush your skin. His hot breath fans your ear as his lips press yours open, as his tongue slides over yours, teaching, like he always does. “I need you. I need you to be waiting when I come back from a long day. I need you to help me lead the 9th Division. I just… I need you.”

“And I love you,” you answer, wily hands rubbing his muscular arms and stroking the tattoo on his neck. Your tongue darts out to touch the “69” on his cheek. He closes his mouth over yours again, fingers caressingly sliding around to your back as his lips heat. His body, all angles and hard planes, presses hard to yours, every square inch locked with pent-up need.

Your own fingers are tangled in his hair, gripping tight, and Shuhei grunts, his mouth running down your throat. His lips brush one perfect spot, one tiny area of ultra sensitive skin, and you tug on his hair. His teeth find your sweet spot, nipping, until a faint red mark appears. “There,” he growls, his kisses growing more urgent. “Everyone will know who loves you.”

You return the gesture, although you bite quite a bit harder than necessary just to get Shuhei to cry out. He doesn’t disappoint, but you didn’t count on his stumble that carried you both to the wall, kissing and touching and loving. His heart and yours gallop, beat for beat, as the burning in your souls connects, twines.

Shuhei nuzzles your neck. “I’ve never lost control like that before. Did I hurt you?”

“No… But I gave you a serious hickey.”

“Huh?” Shuhei touches it just as the door opens; Renji laughs out loud. “Man, take a look at your neck! Looks like she bit you pretty good.”

Shuhei narrows his eyes and Renji, still laughing, pats him on the back. “Hey, at least you finally got with her. Eh, Rangiku, pony up the money—he told her he loves her!”

“You pony up,” Gran says, grinning. “I bet they’d finally get together and make out. Eat that, red!” She snatches the wad of bills from Renji, who just scowls.

BLEACH: 10 Minutes in Heaven {Shinigami Headquarters *Part One*} Shusuke Amagai

Flame

“Flame,” you read aloud, and immediately see Shusuke Amagai, former captain of the 3rd Division, get to his feet. Surprisingly, he seems to have recovered from the sip of alcohol he’d had earlier. It’s pretty well known that Amagai is nearly incapable of drinking and remaining conscious.

He eyes you from across the room, walking towards the closet. His gaze brings you back to the moment—

Captain Amagai realized his foolishness, his stupidity. He hated himself. His gut burned with it. He’d manipulated good people, destroyed the happiness of others, and now he was kneeling before Yamamoto, despising the very air he drew. He would kill himself.

As he raised the blade to summon the purifying fire, you ran. Your heart raced, and you crested the hill, and suddenly you crashed into him. “No!”

Gazing down at him, you cried, tears coursing down your face like rain. “Stop! Please…”

He steps into the open doorway and offers his hand. You take it.

The door shuts and Rangiku announces the time left. “Ten minutes, starting now!”

“_________, how are you?” Shusuke asks, his thumb brushing your cheekbone. He smiles at you, and you smile back.

“I’m fine,” you manage, rubbing a shoulder nervously. You loved this man; that was why you had stopped him on the hill that day. His brown eyes are soft and considering.

“You’re thinking about that day.”

You don’t like being so transparent, but you nod. “I… I couldn’t let you do it.” You swipe at your eyes. The memory by itself aches.

“I think about it a lot, myself,” Shusuke says, taking your hand and leading you to the wall to sit. “I had to stop—I couldn’t let you get hurt. Not you,” he murmured, seemingly to himself—“Never you.”

You slide your fingers between his. They fit perfectly, and Shusuke studies your hand in his. “That damn grudge almost lost me everything. If you hadn’t arrived just then, I would be a pile of ashes.”

You wince. “Shusuke, don’t.”

“It’s the truth.” He sighs again. “The point is, because you came barreling up that hill to save the day I’m alive. I have a chance to make up for my mistakes—and a chance to be with you.”

“I want to be with you too.” The fumblings of first love are vacant for both of you; at the hill you had acknowledged your deep feelings and Shusuke had accepted them. They had become his reason for living.

There was no uneasy stutter, no quiet blush. There was no need. On the hill, on the verge, there had been no time for fear, and now it was just a question of where and when these precious emotions were realized.

That time was now, and the place was here.

Shusuke guides you into his arms, waiting until you are completely enfolded in his captain’s haori before he dips his head. “I love you, ________.”

At the moment your lips meet, Shusuke pulls you close, his heart matching yours, beat for beat. His mouth is warm, like the haori he’d stripped from his shoulders and wrapped around you. Contentment spills into your blood as Shusuke lifts you into his arms and carries you from the room. Rangiku, about to protest, is silenced by a look from Captain Hitsugaya, and Shusuke, with a chuckle, shuts the door behind you as you make your way down to his desk.

Once there, he begins in earnest.

Quaking with want, you kiss him, steadying yourself as his strong arms brace on either side of you. Sweeping everything off the desk, Shusuke presses you down, lacing the fingers of both hands with your own and stretching them up above your head. The metal is cold against your back, but the warm haori protects you.

His kisses are sweet and light, morsels of paradise. Then he kisses you fiercely, his need overriding the desire to be tender. His tongue paints your lips with deliberate firmness as his hands pin yours to the desk top; then his tongue is inside, caressing, touching, bringing your mouth alive. Your senses hum with overload as Shusuke’s lips brush the side of your neck. His tongue touches, much like it did in your mouth, but this time it is accompanied by his teeth. The nip is gentle, but you still squeak.

He lifts you entirely up onto the desk, freeing your hands so his can trail down your back. Your fingers quickly begin kneading his scalp as his lips worship every inch of bare skin, and you lay your burning cheek on his shoulder as he begins working his shirt off, never once taking his lips from your neck.

“I love you, Shusuke,” you whisper in his ear, your fingers tangled up in his unkempt hair.

He pauses mid-caress and looks up at you. He smiles. “Good. I’m glad I’m not alone.”

Sometime the next morning Shusuke brings you awake with a few gentle kisses. “Hey.” He drops another kiss on your waiting lips. “It’ll be time to start work soon—we should get out of here before somebody finds us.”

“Shusuke, wait.” You catch his shoulder as he moves to sit up, his robes shrugging down over sculpted abs.

“Is something wrong?”

“No. I just… Er… Will you marry me?” You take his hand. You’d just popped the question—go you.

Shusuke’s eyes glitter and he spends the next few moments turning your brain into a quivering puddle of adoration, running his lips and hands over you. “How’s that for an answer?”

“Yes would have worked too,” you all but sigh.

“Yes isn’t as much fun. Now what do you say we go celebrate somewhere private…?”
 

BLEACH: 10 Minutes in Heaven {Shinigami Headquarters *Part One*} Izuru Kira


 Gloom

“Gloom,” you say, tucking a chunk of hair behind your ear.

Izuru Kira stands up, putting aside his zanpakuto. The handsome lieutenant of the 3rd Division rarely smiles, and you definitely don’t see him smiling now. Rangiku probably put a card in for him as a joke.

When you reach the closet he steps in front of you and opens the door, letting you walk in first. The gentlemanly gesture is not lost on you, and you smile at him, although he doesn’t smile back.

“Uhm, Izuru—is it alright if I call you Izuru?”

He nods and shuts the door behind you.

“Izuru, I’m sorry you have to play this stupid game. I… I know you hate stuff like this, so I’ll just… shut up… now…” You slide down the wall into a sitting position. Damn.

You hear him moving around, maybe getting settled, and finally he speaks. “It isn’t your fault. We threw this party to thank you for helping us; this is just part of the thank-you.”

It’s cold in the closet, but asking Izuru—no, Kira, calling him by his first name seems too familiar—to warm you would be beyond embarrassing. “Kira-san, during the battle… You fought the man named Redder. The way you killed him… It made my blood run cold.” You’re not even sure what made you mention this, but it seems like the room is suddenly ten degrees colder. Are you some kind of masochist, doing this to yourself?

“War always cools the blood. It’s brutal business.” His indifferent voice is the equivalent of a stab.

“It was just so… cruel.” And before you know it, your hot face is wet with salt water. Not tears. There’s no way you’re crying.

“It’s the way of the world. You’re lucky nothing bad has ever happened to you. Your life is just one gigantic ray of sunshine, isn’t it?” Bitterness creeps into his tone.

“Shut up, Kira!” You shout, cheeks stinging. You are crying, you are hurting, and…

“You’re crying.” He moves across the closet, ducking the hanging light (which is still off, because nobody knows where the switch is), and sits beside you, turning your face into the sleeve of his robe. “There’s no need. I’m sorry I sounded cruel. I suppose a person must get like this when the people they care for betray them.”

You lay your head on his shoulder, pulling his arm around your shoulders.

“What are you doing?”

“It’s Ten Minutes in Heaven. I’ve already been through hell. You owe me.”

He laughs. Pain clenches your heart until his lips meet your brow. “I guess I do. Can you forgive me for being so dark?”

“Only if you kiss me,” you say, looking up into his face.

“A kiss to be forgiven… A small price for hurting your feelings.”

Your eyes narrow. “Izuru, you’re an idiot!” You whack him over the head.

“Ouch!”

“I love you, you dope! I want to be your ray of sunshine! I want to make you smile and I want you to love me too! Argh!”

Izuru is still rubbing the top of his head when laughter seems to bubble up from inside him. “You want… me?” He asks wonderingly. “Hang on—you wanted a kiss in exchange for forgiveness, but you really want the kiss because you love me.” He says it slowly, as if he’s trying to understand entirely. “Is that about right?”

You drag both hands through your hair. “Yes! Finally!”

He sighs and shakes his head, chuckling. “Life can’t be all bad if I managed to make a wonderful woman fall in love with me, huh?”

You punch him. “You still owe me that stupid kiss.”

“Good point.” He kisses you quietly, just a bare touch of lips, then melds them to yours, firmer than before, learning the shape of your mouth with his. “Do you like this?”

“Mmhmm,” you mumble, reluctant to separate as you cuddle yourself into his side.

“My ray of sunshine. You said that was what you wanted to be.” He teases your head up and plants a chaste kiss on your chin. His lips meet yours again with almost painful tenderness. “I’m sorry I hurt you.”

“You’re forgiven, Izuru. I love you, remember?”

He pulls you in closer, sliding you into his until-then vacant lap. His arms slip around your waist, holding you tight against him as he speaks into your hair, his hot breath touching your scalp. “After everything that’s happened, after all the people who turned on me… You’re right. I’ve become gloomy, and I do need some sun in my life.”

You turn to face him, straddling his lap. “But do you need me?”

“Absolutely. Now come here…” Tickling, teasing, Izuru drags you close, his lips sealing over yours with sweet certainty, even as the door opens and a camera clicks. Izuru rubs your back and nudges your mouth open to accept his tongue, which lazily strokes the inside of your mouth.

Three more clicks, and now Rangiku is gushing and laughing in an overloud voice.

Izuru glances over your head at the audience, his eyes icy.

It shuts discreetly.

“What was that for?”

“I want you to myself, at least for a little while longer.” His smile is slow and calm, but it’s a smile, and you rest your forehead on his. He’ll heal.