Angstober 18/24

Major Illness/A Terrible Secret

Another installation of Haruka Dies! Doc and Dreaming’s Angstober fun! I can’t really justify this being late for BOTH prompt days it works for, as it is a) not long (1177 words) and b) more like 3 drabbles strung together than a proper fic. BUT HERE IT IS. Chronologically, this takes place first, then this, this, this, and finally this.

Haruka could never get in the habit of going to the doctor. She took Himeka religiously, not a check up was missed nor a fever unevaluated. Michiru got her encouragement to go as well, even. But Haruka herself? Her mother’s old admonishments played in her head every time. Never mind that they had excellent insurance now, that even without Michiru’s parents’ money they made enough to comfortably cover almost any copay that was thrown at them, Haruka had to suck it up.

It had worked so far. But now here she was, waiting on a blood test to determine what scary unpronounceable word applied to her.

No, none of them applied to her. The doctor was overreacting, saying things to run more tests and get more money. That was what doctors did. If Haruka was really sick, she’d be in bed.

Just that morning, she’d walked Himeka to school. The moment they’d gotten out of Michiru’s watchful gaze, her little girl had lifted up her arms. “Papa, I want to ride!” Haruka hoisted her onto her back, running and jumping along the rode side as Himeka screamed with laughter.

Maybe that had taken more out of her than it should have, but that was part of getting old, wasn’t it? And if she’d gotten a little thin, she just hadn’t been eating enough, her metabolism had always been hard to keep up with. And if she’d passed out at work, that just meant—

“Ms. Tennoh?”

She stood. The doctor’s face was worn with lines behind her glasses. They all converged into an image of worry.

“Is there anyone with you? Anyone you would like us to call?”

Haruka opened her mouth to say her wife, they could call Michiru. But this was bad news. Michiru didn’t deserve bad news in the middle of the day. “No, I’d like to hear this alone.”

—-

Himeka bounded out of the school’s double doors and straight into Haruka’s arms. “Papa! Look what I made!” She held up a paper nearly as long as her arm-span emblazoned with a finger painted pink pig.

“You’re taking after your mama, I see.”

Himeka beamed. “Can you carry me home?”

Haruka hesitated.

You need to take it easy. We’ll run more tests when you come back tomorrow, but it’s very likely that a tumor…

“Of course, princess.” They were wrong, they had to be wrong. She’d fought a goddamn war against aliens and demons and god only knew what else, and if she could get through that then she couldn’t die now. Haruka took Himeka on her shoulders and ran.

“Papa, slow down!”

But she couldn’t. Whatever was inside her was going to catch her, and her old instincts kicked in. Charge into battle or run away. Haruka’s pulse rang in her ears, her heart felt like it was ripping apart with every ragged breath. Himeka leaned in and held onto her for dear life. Haruka hoped she would never let go.

Michiru wasn’t home yet when they got there. “What do you say we make dinner for Mama tonight?”

“Mama wants pizza.”

“Does she?”

Himeka straightened her stance and nodded solemnly. “She ab-sol-ut-el-y does.” She smiled. “That’s a good word, isn’t it?”

“A very good word.” Haruka rummaged in the cupboard to find their pizza pan. “Is it on your vocabulary list?”

“No, Auntie Mina taught it to me.”

Haruka laughed, but it ripped at her throat halfway up and brought tears in her eyes. Where was she going to be when Mina started teaching Himeka less savory things? Who was going to yell at her when she told Himeka about condoms or the best way to pick pocket men? Minako wouldn’t give a flying fuck about any of Michiru’s objections, Haruka had to be there. She grabbed the pan and retreated into the light.

“You’re the smartest girl I’ve ever known, you know that?”

Himeka frowned. “But Kimi is better in—“

“No.” Haruka scooped her up. “You’re my smartest girl.” She ruffled her hair. “And the prettiest, and the bravest, and—“

“Papa stop!” Himeka giggled into her shoulder. “You’re being silly.”

“Am I? I’d better stop, there’s no room for silliness in pizza making.”

There was, it turned out, a lot of room for silliness in pizza making.  By the time Michiru walked in there was a very lopsided pizza in the oven and quite a lot of sauce on the counter and their faces. Not a drop on Himeka’s white shirt, though, Haruka had to proudly note.

Michiru hung her coat on the wrack with a resigned smile. “Sometimes I forget I’m coming home to two children.”

“Mama, we made you dinner!”

“I see that.” She grabbed a paper towel and wiped Himeka’s face. “I trust you kept your Papa in line? We’re not having candy?”

Himeka nodded. “I was very stern.” That was probably a Rei word, Haruka mused. Perhaps Rei…

Michiru peered into the oven. “You even put some vegetables on, well done.”

“Hey.” Haruka wrapped her arms around Michiru from behind. “The spinach was my idea.”

“I’m shocked.” She turned and gave Haruka a peck on the cheek. “But I suppose if you’ve both been so good, we might be able to have the dessert I got from Mako…”

Himeka shrieked with delight.

—-

An ordinary evening had no right to be so beautiful, Haruka mused as she climbed into bed that night. It wasn’t fair for the universe to throw everything she had to lose in her face. She’d get better. She swore to God she’d get better, even if the doctors were right in their suspicions. Michiru and Himeka needed her.

“I got an interesting call today,” Michiru said from the bathroom.

Haruka’s heart dropped. Michiru knew, and would be so scared, and Haruka didn’t want to do this tonight, Michiru didn’t deserve it. “Oh?”

Michiru came into the bedroom. Her robe hung off her shoulders, but she clutched it around her chest. “You fainted at work. Mikey thought I should know.”

Damn it, Mikey. She’d have to talk to him about this, she didn’t call his wife about personal business. But it wasn’t the hospital, and that was something. “Yeah, I… I guess I didn’t eat enough or something.”

A lie for protection was alright, wasn’t it?

Michiru’s brow knotted. “You have been…” She pressed her lips together. She’d noticed, then, that Haruka had lost weight. Haruka prayed that was all.  “I guess we’ll have to make pancakes in the morning to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

Haruka smiled, but a hurricane roared inside her. “Come here.”

Michiru climbed onto the bed. Haruka put her hands on her waist, thumbs caressing the fabric over her hips. “I love you.” She pressed her head into her neck. “So much.”

“I love you, Haruka.” Her arms wrapped around Haruka’s body, one hand tangling into her hair. “Please never scare me like that again.”

“I won’t.” Haruka would keep her secret until she got better. She kissed along the edge of Michiru’s robe. “I promise.”

captainsnumple:

GASP I FINISHED A GODDAMN THING FOR ANGSTOBER HELL HAS OFFICIALLY FROZEN OVER

(not really finished it’s very raw I just can’t redraw it anymore I have my limits)

This should have been a contribution to Day 19, “The brain has thirty seconds after the heart stops, she remembered”. As all good kids, I have my number of trash AUs, and in one of them Haruka never picks up her transformation rod. Nevertheless, she can’t get her strange saviour out of her head (as if anyone ever doubted it), so she finds Michiru again and they engage in an utterly fucked up kind of relationship. Michiru still fighting evil, Haruka, who refused to become Uranus and therefore unable (and unwilling) to battle, fighting herself. In the end Michiru goes to Marine Cathedral alone, after a huuuuge quarrel with Haruka, with result QUITE PREDICTABLE.

ENJOY

THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL AND PAINFUL OH MYGOD

Play to the Coda

docholligay:

Written for Day 22 of Harumichi Angstober. Done in @sittingoverheredreaming and I’s Haruka Dies! Doc and Dreaming’s Angstober Fun! AU. This takes place after this and this, but before this. 1,087 words

Michiru leaned against the too-white wall in a move that
might have been mistaken for casualness by those who did not know her. But Rei
saw the exhaustion on her face, the energy practically dripping from her limbs
as she stood across from the room where the last moments of Haruka’s life would
be lived.

Inside, Mina spoke softly to Haruka’s unnaturally quiet
form, the only movement the rhythmic rise and fall of her chest, powered by
machines. Michiru had never imagined that she would miss the way Haruka used to
sleep—twitchy, tangled up in blankets, her body always busy. She used to tease
Haruka so. Now she would give anything to get accidentally kicked in the middle
of the night.

Keep reading

Angstober 22

“Imagine the doctor telling one of them, “She’s gonna go at any moment.” and so the other is struggling to say awake and be with them in the last moment, but eventually falls asleep, and while she’s asleep the other just slips away”

I’VE BEEN SLACKING FOR TOO LONG (the last two weeks have been an absolute whirlwind).  A continuation from Day 5. ~700 words

She’d watched them leave.  Michiru’s mother had at least had the decency to cry, but she’d let her husband escort her out with a firm hand. “There’s nothing we can do. We’ll only be in the doctor’s way.” They hadn’t so much as looked at Haruka, tucked into the corner of the waiting room. She felt a wave of a feeling too twisted to name. Staying here wouldn’t put them in the way, it was what a waiting room was for, and the doctors had said all they could do was ease Michiru’s pain anyway, shouldn’t they want to be with her instead of their socialite dinner guests? Hadn’t Haruka been right about them all along? But that was what brought Michiru here. Haruka could not resent them. 

She found her way to Michiru’s room in their wake. It was too bright for the time of night, too bright for the injuries she’d sustained. The purples and blues and horrible garish reds that mottled her skin were thrown into too strong a contrast with the sterile white surroundings. Michiru would have said something about color composition. She did that sometimes, illuminating the art that could be found in life for Haruka’s uncultured appreciation. But Michiru couldn’t say anything now. A tube ran down her throat to keep her breathing.

“Excuse me.” A nurse tapped on Haruka’s shoulder. “It’s family only now.”

“I’m…” Haruka cleared her throat. “I’m her sister.” 

The nurse eyed her lanky frame, then Michiru’s delicate broken body in the bed. Cousin, why hadn’t she said cousin? That was family, and more believable. Haruka could do nothing right. But then the nurse cast her eyes to Haruka’s face, and her gaze softened.  

“She’s going to go at any moment. We can’t do anything more.” She patted Haruka’s back. “It’s good if she has someone.” 

Haruka didn’t want to try her luck by climbing into Michiru’s bed, so she pulled the hard plastic chair they gave her as close as she could. “Hey, Michi.” Her hand was the wrong shape, they hadn’t bothered setting the bones in light of the rest of the damage they couldn’t fix. Haruka held it anyway. Michiru had taken such care of her hands. An artist’s pride, she’d always said.  Her callouses her still there, the only thing that felt right to the touch. 

“I’m—“ Haruka’s breath caught. “Let’s run away together. We don’t need this place, I’ve been saving up money.” She stroked Michiru’s hair. It was still beautiful, even tangled and bloody as it was. “I was gonna buy you a ring, a real nice one, but that can wait.” Haruka tried to smile. “You know I love you, even if I can’t do all the things I’m supposed to for you. I want to take care of you as best I can.”

She would have, she swore she would have. She never could have given Michiru the life she was used to, but she’d have done everything she could to make up for it. Haruka loved her. Wasn’t that something more than she’d had? Money couldn’t buy that. Her parents had it all, and they didn’t even bother to stay, that wasn’t love. Haruka was here for her. 

Even though Haruka put her here.  

“I’m sorry.” Haruka kissed Michiru’s gnarled hand. “They were right about me, weren’t they? I did ruin you.” She cried then, hating that it was more for herself than for Michiru. If she loved her, she should have stayed at the goddamn dinner. She’d left, just like Michiru’s parents, how could she hate them for it?  
“I won’t leave you again. I’m gonna be here. I’m here Michiru.” She rested her head on her pillow. “You’re not gonna be alone.”

She stroked Michiru’s marred cheek. The heart monitor beeped like clockwork as all Haruka’s emotions began weighing heavily on her eyelids. She had to stay awake until it stopped. She had to be here. And maybe it would never stop, and there would be a miracle, and she had to be awake…

Someone was shaking her. “Sweetie, you… we have to move her.”

Haruka’s head shot up. The heart monitor was switched off. Michiru’s skin was cold. 

There had been just one thing Haruka could do for her, and she’d failed.

docholligay replied to your post: Well. Okay. Final thoughts for the nig…

AGreed, the writing was weak in this one, too much packed in, it felt light in harumichi content…I mean basically you’re watching them in the background, I wanted them talking together and BEING together

Yeah. And I’d forgive it being light on HaruMichi if it was heavy on the Inners since they’re graduating… but it wasn’t even that? I feel like there wasn’t anything it *really* focused on. (I’d almost say Chibs and Hotaru, but it pulled back from that even).

I’d sell my soul to trade the HaruSagi shit for one solid HaruMichi scene.

Or even just the inners having more solid moments to be honest. I’m mad because PE did SO GOOD fitting character moments into a fairly tight plot. This felt so jumbled.

Well. Okay. Final thoughts for the night:

The writing was kind of lacking in this one? Both for the story and a lot of the songs. I’m not really sure why they chose to include/leave out some of the things they did.

All the actresses were on point though! I’m going to miss these girls so much.