Kou #1 malewife
The thing about cosmos (the flowers in Sakura's peace field) is that they're very tall. They can grow up to 3 feet or 4. So the realistic depiction of that field should have looked like this đ.
I'm not even kidding đ
There's wholesome ships and there's toxic ships, but I'd like to coin 'sodium chloride ships', where the individuals involved are both horrible and dangerous people, but somehow being together renders them surprisingly well-adjusted (if a little salty).
I love how Aiden and Nicholas dynamic is just yapper + not listening and its so fun
Do you have any art for Fence comics?
Hi! Yes, this self-indulgent nichoji sticker sheet đ€đ„č
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A/N: This AU now has a name! The title is taken from the song 'Ghosts of My Hometown' by The Strike, which is a Nicholas song if I've ever heard one. It's all about not really being able to leave your past behind, and coming to terms with the ghosts of where you came from. Also, I feel like the phrase "lost in a familiar place" fits well with an AU where Nicholas is a stranger in a place that, in another life, would be familiar.
If you haven't read these, check out Part 1 and Part 2!
Nicholas swallowed, wondering if he was about to experience death by epĂ©e on the spot. He didnât know national #2 Seiji Katayama had this kind of temper. âUh, look, it wasnât for long or anything, but I saw some moments where I wouldâve gone for a hit. If it were me.â
Seiji stared squinty-eyed at Nicholas like he couldnât believe what he was seeing. âWho are you?â he said.
âUh, Iâm-â
âThis is Nicholas.â Suddenly Aiden was draping an arm around Nicholasâ shoulders and smiling warmly. âHeâs an external spectator today.â
Nicholas noticed that Aiden had suddenly acquired the ability to remember his name. He had a hunch that Aidenâs friendly behaviour had more to do with riling up Seiji than with him, though. âUh, yeah.â He stuck out a hand for Seiji to shake. âNice to meet you.â
Seiji looked distrustful, but shook his hand. âIâve never seen you at a competition before.â
âI was at Regionals six months ago,â Nicholas said. âI fenced Kyle Allen in the first round.â
One eyebrow went up. âSo you lost. And you think you could find holes in my defence?â
Nicholas had nothing to prove to this arrogant, condescending guy, but he felt annoyance rising anyway. âI could prove it if given the chance. Maybe youâre not as infallible as you think you are.â
Seijiâs eyes widened in something like irate disbelief, and next to him, Bobby made a small squeaking noise. That was when Aiden decided to stick his oar in.
âSeiji, werenât you saying the other day that you donât really have anyone here that challenges you?â
Seiji clenched his jaw and glared at Aiden. âAs if Iâm going to fence any amateur who just wanders in here and-â
âThatâs enough,â Coach Williamsâ voice came like a whipcrack, making everyone in the vicinity jump guiltily. âCan I remind you that we are in the middle of a fencing practice? I expect you all to focus on the task at hand.â
There was a round of âYes Coach,â and âSorry Coach,â from the assembled fencers. Nicholas mumbled, âSorry, Coach,â along with the others, even though Coach Williams technically wasnât his coach. But you didnât cross a fencing coach.
âEveryone whoâs not a member of the team, I want you to practice footwork,â Coach Williams said. âYou know the drill; find a partner, and each of you take turns advancing and retreating, then switch. Focus on your feet.â
Given their orders, the students who had been looking on began to disperse. Bobby gave Nicholas an apologetic grimace and paired up with a dark-haired boy of medium height.
âNicholas,â Coach said, and Nicholas straightened up, rigid, in anticipation of the dressing-down he was sure was coming. âYouâre here as a guest, and not as a member of the student body.â
Nicholas winced at the reminder. âI know, I-â
âBut,â Coach Williams continued over him, âwe have a spare set of gear in the supply room that should fit you.â Nicholas blinked at her. âIf youâd like to take part, you may â but I expect nothing less than scrupulous conduct and sportsmanship from you. Am I making myself clear?â
Speechless, Nicholas nodded. The words, I get to fence???! were exploding somewhere in the back of his mind.
âYes, Coach. I understand,â he said, almost vibrating with excitement. Seiji Katayamaâs expression darkened even more, and Nicholas beamed at him. Was he really about to fence-
âAiden,â Coach said, and Aiden turned to her. âI want you to partner with Nicholas. Youâll spar a practice match, first to 10 points. Eugene and Seiji will do the same; Harvard, youâll referee.â
âOh, I donât think Iâm the one who should-â Aiden began, but a look from Harvard made him subside. âYes, Coach.â
Even dressed in borrowed fencing whites (which did fit him well) and standing in a fencing salle he barely belonged in, Nicholas felt amazing as he took up a position across from Aiden on the piste. This was it. This was what he lived for â the chance to fence.
Since heâd started learning with Coach Joe â finally putting those years of devouring every fencing video he could find into practice â Nicholas quickly realised that nothing compared to the feeling of standing on the piste with a foil in his hand.
(Even when the piste was actually the community hall floor. It still felt awesome).
Fencing at Regionals had been even more incredible. Heâd felt like heâd arrived. Even losing in his very first round to an ass like Kyle Allen hadnât been able to dampen it.
Aiden seemed to be sizing him up, and then he smiled. It wasnât the same cutthroat smile that heâd given Seiji before they fenced, but it wasnât completely friendly either. âSorry about this,â he said. âI did originally have a more⊠pleasurable plan for today.â
âFencingâs pleasurable,â Nicholas pointed out.
Aidenâs lips quirked into a slightly disbelieving smirk. âRight.â
The match began. Aiden was, as Nicholas had seen, a skilled fencer, and Nicholas was unable to parry his first two hits. Right afterwards, Nicholas got a hit past his guard, and Aiden looked surprised, like he hadnât seen it coming. Like a lot of right-handed fencers, Aiden wasnât as good at blocking or predicting moves from the left. Nicholas knew he could press his advantage there.
He attacked, fast and aggressive. Aiden was clearly adapting to his approach, making it more difficult for Nicholas to get through, but he still didnât seem able to predict exactly where Nicholas would attack from. By the time Coach called the first break, Nicholas had scored two hits to Aidenâs four.
As they paused to catch their breath, Aiden said, âOf course, I know Iâm not the one youâd rather be fencing right now.â
Nicholas frowned quizzically at him. Aiden continued, âYou and Seiji had some real⊠tension just then. That was interesting. I could almost see the sparks flying.â
Nicholas glanced over at Seiji, but he was focused on sparring with Eugene. âYou seem like you donât really get along with Seiji,â he commented. âWhyâs that?â
Aiden snorted and gave an airy shrug. âSeijiâs an excellent fencer,â he said. âBut youâve met him. Heâs not really a âteamâ guy.â
âAre you?â
Aiden blinked at Nicholas. âSorry?â
âYou were planning to skip practice, even though youâre on the team,â Nicholas pointed out. âBut Seijiâs here.â Even though, as the national number two-ranked fencer, he probably had a better excuse than anyone to skip practice â or train on his own. Nicholas didnât really like Seijiâs attitude, but he didnât think Aiden was one to be preaching about teamwork.
Aidenâs eyes narrowed, but Coach Williams cut in. âLess talking, more fencing, boys.â
They took up their positions again, and almost immediately, Nicholas scored a hit. Aiden had been over-extended, and not just briefly; it felt like a glaring mistake from someone who was clearly a competent fencer. Aiden said nothing, just narrowed his eyes; he quickly took two more points. But even when he managed to pull ahead, Nicholas was there, narrowing the gap again.
By the second break, the score was 7-6 to Aiden. Nicholas was only one point behind a skilled older fencer who represented a high school at state competitions. The excitement coursed through him like electricity.
As they pulled off their masks, Aiden looked disgruntled for a fraction of a second, but it quickly smoothed away. âI feel like I should warn you,â he said, sounding apologetic. âSeijiâs not going to go easy on you because youâre a rookie. The guy doesnât hold back, ever. Even when itâs just a practice match.â
âNot like you, you mean?â Nicholas asked. He didnât need or want Aiden to go easy on him, but even from the brief time theyâd known each other, Aiden didnât strike him as the type of guy who gave things his all if he could help it. He just projected this air of coasting through life. It wasnât the kind of thing Nicholas really found attractive, but Aiden had been charming, and well. It had been a while since anyone paid him attention in that way.
Aiden shrugged theatrically. âIâd just hate to see you get railroaded,â he said. âVery few people have the ability to hold their own against Seiji. Mind you, I did.â He delivered this last revelation almost as an afterthought.
Nicholas stared at him. âWhat do you mean?â Watching the two of them fence, it hadnât seemed like Aiden was in Seijiâs league at all.
âOh, yes, Seiji lost to me in the try-outs for the fencing team,â Aiden said, with a smirk. âIt happens. But he didnât take it very well.â He made a show of putting his mask back on in response to Coach Williamsâ pointed glare.
Aiden had beaten Seiji. Aiden had beaten Seiji. And Nicholas was almost level with him in a sparring match. Even if it was just a practice â then if Nicholas could beat Aiden, it felt⊠like he could almost be on an equal footing with Seiji.
A calm and a focus descended over Nicholas that he hadnât really found before. He tried to think and act quickly in his fencing matches, but trying to do something wasnât the same as doing it, and he hadnât reached the point yet where instinct would just take over. He knew he was fast, but there was still that disconnect between what he sensed and saw and how his body acted. It could be frustrating.
Now, though, it was like he could deconstruct his opponent at a speed heâd never experienced, Aidenâs weak points mapped out and highlighted. He could remember what had worked before and apply those tactics. And he was fast. His technique had holes in it; Kyle had had the experience to exploit those at Regionals, though he still wasnât able to fend off Nicholas completely. And Nicholas was always learning.
Aiden attacked, but Nicholas read his movement and parried, then countered with a hit past Aidenâs guard. And another. 8-7.
Aiden scored a hit that Nicholas wasnât anticipating by kind of flicking his blade â the flick sailed past his guard in a way that was extremely annoying, but Nicholas was also intrigued. That seemed like a neat attack.
They were neck and neck at 8 points each, and the next person to score a hit would be one point away from winning. Nicholas saw an opening. Attacked. Scored. 9-8.
Nicholas became aware that they had an audience. Maybe had had one for a while â the match between Eugene and Seiji had already concluded, and together with Harvard, theyâd come to spectate.
Seijiâs attention was laser-focused on Nicholas. If Nicholas could just win this next point, he-
Aiden exploited an opening in Nicholasâ guard, scoring a hit to his wrist. Damn. But they were neck and neck; as long as Nicholas kept fencing like he knew he couldâ
Aiden went in for the attack â but just as Nicholas had expected, there was a slight turn in his body that left his shoulder open to a hitâ
10-9.
Nicholas had won.
Coach Williamsâ whistle blew, and she looked genuinely approving as she said, âWell done, Nicholas.â Then she added, âAiden, I have some notes for things to focus on in our next practice sessions.â
Aiden pulled off his mask and faced Harvard, who greeted him with a raised eyebrow. âYou lost?â
âIt was just a practice match!â Aiden protested. âI was giving Nicholas the chance to improve.â
âRight.â
âHey, nice fencing!â This was Eugene, whoâd been fencing Harvard before and had just fenced Seiji. He gave Nicholas a friendly punch to the shoulder that was a little bit painful. âWhere did you come from, again? Coach didnât really say.â
Nicholas opened his mouth to explain, but just then, someone took hold of his shoulder in an iron grip. Nicholas looked into the glowering visage of Seiji Katayama. âYouâll fence me next,â he said.
kiryu appreciation post cause we love him.
There is something utterly beautiful about the way Nii-sensei conveys emotions through their drawings and I will never get tired of admiring it...