#sasusaku too kind-of

LIVE

How Can I Fight Someone Who Isn’t Even There? (All or Nothing, chapter two)

Fanfiction,A03

The second chapter of All or Nothing is available below the cut or at the websites above! This story is an emotional mess, you have been forewarned! It deals with the fallout of Kakashi and Sakura having an affair while she’s married to Sasuke.

If you like what I do, feel free to support me on ko-fi!

Sarada spent fifteen minutes rearranging her room to include her gifts, laying the weapons on the small table beside her bed while Sakura hung her clothing up. Kakashi watched from the doorway, feeling like an intruder in a private, family moment. Sakura glanced in his direction from time to time, but she didn’t speak or invite him closer. For her part, Sarada ignored Kakashi entirely as she skipped around in an attempt to put off bedtime for as long as possible.

“Come on, let’s get changed for bed time,” Sakura called, pulling a pair of red pajamas from a drawer. “Teeth, story, then bed.”

“But mom,” Sarada began, voice edging toward a high pitched whine.

Sakura playfully swatted at the girl’s bottom with the pajamas. “You’re already up later than you normally are. Come on.”

Sarada scooted away from her mother, pausing in front of Kakashi. Her dark eyes slid over him with far more appraisal than they should have. “Are you spending the night?”

Kakashi coughed, warmth flooding into his cheeks, as Sakura growled her daughter’s name. “Sarada-chan,” she warned, looking exasperated. “Kakashi and Mama need to have a talk after you go to sleep, then he’s going home.”

“But it’s already bedtime time,” Sarada chirped, pointing toward her darkened window. “Why didn’t you talk during the day?”

“Because someone had a birthday party,” Kakashi answered, forcing his tone to false playfulness. “And, we were busy with that.”

Sakura put a hand on Sarada’s head and turned it toward the bathroom. She pressed the pajamas into the girl’s hands. “Go, brush your teeth and get changed.”

Kakashi scrubbed a hand through his hair the way he did when he was nervous as Sarada moved down the hallway. Sakura leaned one shoulder against the wall, watching the girl before turning back to Kakashi. “She didn’t mean anything by it.”

“Does that make you feel better about it,” Kakashi asked, voice pitched to a low whisper. Sakura’s lips compressed into a thin line, but he shook his head before she could speak. “She’s right. I should have gone home at the same time as Naruto and Hinata.”

“But you stayed,” Sakura pointed out, turning to glance toward the bathroom as water splashed into the sink. “Why?”

Kakashi chuckled and shook his head. Because I’m an idiot, he thought, though he held the words close to his chest, offering a shrug instead. “Because you asked me to.”

The water turned off and Sarada padded down the hallway in her pajamas. Kakashi offered a tight eye smile. “Goodnight, Sarada-chan.”

The girl dipped into a quick bow without looking at Sakura to see what she was supposed to do. “Goodnight, Kakashi-san.”

“Let me get her to sleep, then we can continue this conversation.” Sakura met Kakashi’s gaze over Sarada’s head, warning him to stay put.

Humming in agreement, Kakashi dipped his chin and wandered back downstairs so that he wouldn’t intrude on their privacy. The sound of Sakura’s voice drifted down the hallway, regaling Sarada with some kind of fairy tale with talking mice. Kakashi shook his head and walked toward the entrance, wondering if he’d be better off to pull on his sandals and leave. He’d run away the last time, and it had been better for both of them.

Kakashi paused by the empty space where the photograph of Sakura and Sasuke had hung. He wondered why Sakura hadn’t replaced it. Peeking back at the stairs to make certain the woman wasn’t coming, Kakashi slid open a drawer in the small table near the door. It was the most obvious place to put the photo, and he wasn’t surprised to find it there.

Running his fingers across the image, Kakashi remembered the day with a bittersweetness that left him sick to his stomach. Sakura looked beautiful with the pale pink kimono and white flowers dotting her hair. Sasuke looked much as he always did, a shadow against Sakura’s brilliance. Kakashi studied the boy’s face, looking for the happiness that should have been there.

“I always loved him more than he loved me.” Sakura’s soft whisper came from behind Kakashi. He spun to find the woman standing at the base of the stairs with a sad smile on her face.

Kakashi closed the drawer with his hip, flushing at being caught. “I’m sure that’s not true.”

Sakura crossed the space between them and rested her hand on Kakashi’s arm for a moment, then leaned past him to turn off the light in the hallway. He frowned as she moved toward the door, locking and bolting it. When she turned back to Kakashi, the shadows did something that made her eyes look haunted. “Sasuke never,” the woman paused, searching for the right word, then shrugged. “He never knew how to show emotion. Honestly, I’m not convinced he feels them in the same way other people do. They’re concepts for him, ideas rather than realities.”

And that’s what you chose to spend your entire life chasing? Was he worth the effort once you finally caught him? Kakashi wanted to ask, but he was afraid of the answer. Sakura had loved Sasuke for as long as Kakashi had known her. It had been a simple crush when they first met, then it turned into more. Kakashi wondered if Sakura understood love any better than Sasuke did. It wasn’t the obsessive desire to win someone or the insatiable urge to hold them. Sometimes, love was letting go.

Kakashi knew that he should say something in response, or offer solace in the face of Sakura’s pain, but he couldn’t think of anything. Sakura moved past him without waiting for an answer, catching Kakashi’s hand in hers like it was the most natural thing in the world. Her gentle pressure nearly pulled him from his feet as she walked back to the kitchen with a determined step.

Sakura released Kakashi’s hand and pulled two glasses from a cabinet. She filled them both with the sugary concoction from Sarada’s party, then, without asking, she pulled out a bottle of clear liquid from the freezer and added a healthy splash in each cup. Kakashi marveled at how easily Sakura moved around him; tension squeezed his chest, but the woman didn’t seem to notice or care. Kakashi envied her ability to change so easily between one person and the next. He’d never had that skill.

Holding the electric blue drinks, Sakura came around the counter and set them next to Kakashi. She took a long sip from one of the glasses, then gave her head a small shake. He didn’t move toward his cup, well aware that that drinking would lead to something that he couldn’t take back. It already had, multiple times.

Sakura tipped her head to the side, studying Kakashi as her tongue collected the sticky moisture from her lips. Then, she leaned forward and hooked a finger in the top of his mask, dragging it lower. Kakashi captured her wrist, but he couldn’t bring himself to stop her. The fabric slid down his nose, across his lips, and puddled against his chest. Kakashi expected Sakura to hold the drink up to offer him a sip. Instead, the sudden fullness of her mouth stole his breath. His hand fell away, dropping to his side as he sagged backward onto the stool behind him. Hard stone met Kakashi’s back when Sakura took another step toward him without breaking the contact.

Tipping his head up and away, Kakashi murmured Sakura’s name in a warning that sounded breathless even to his ears. His pulse pounded through his temple, erratic as he blew out a breath. Sakura exhaled with a slight smile. “It’s good, right?”

It took Kakashi several moments to realize that Sakura meant the alcohol, not the kiss. He managed a weak laugh, shaking his head. “I’m not sure that’s the most effective way to taste it.”

Sakura reached for her glass, taking another long pull of the liquid. Before the woman could seal their lips together a second time, Kakashi brought the other to his lips. The sugary sweetness flooded his tongue, cut by the burn of alcohol. It left Kakashi’s head spinning as he mumbled some kind of agreement. Sakura stood between his knees, her body the closest that it had been in months, trapping him on the stool.

Humming under her breath, Sakura looked up at Kakashi through her lashes. Every instinct in Kakashi’s body told him to pull her closer and kiss the delicate pout on her lips. He could lift her and switch their positions, fitting their bodies close enough that not even air could interfere. Nearly a month of pent up desire clamored at the back of his mind, memories overlapping fantasies that left him dizzier than the alcohol.

Sakura rested her hands on Kakashi’s thighs, leaning in a second time. Shuddering, Kakashi raised his chin just out of the woman’s reach. He lost his breath in a whoosh when Sakura planted light kisses on his neck instead. His entire body responded, humming and twitching like an electrical current coursed through it. “Stop,” he panted, resting his hands on her shoulders. “I don't—this isn’t why I came today.”

“No,” Sakura asked, voice heavy with desire despite Kakashi’s words. “That doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy being together again.”

Kakashi blew out another breath, able to think more coherently now that Sakura had moved back half a step. He shook his head. “I meant what I said the last time we were together. This isn’t what I want.”

Sakura’s eyes dipped down for a moment, a careful smile decorating her lips. “Are you sure?”

Heat flamed in Kakashi’s cheek as he pushed Sakura back another step, just enough to get his feet beneath him. “Yes,” he managed, though the word sounded strangled. Kakashi tugged at his pants to adjust the fabric, then gave it up as pointless.

To Kakashi’s surprise, Sakura turned to take his seat instead of following him around the counter. Brilliant green eyes studied him, though. “You still want me though,” she observed after a tense moment.

Kakashi chuckled and tightened his hand around his drink, tempted to down the sugary alcohol and throw caution to the wind. He ran his tongue over his lips instead, savoring the aftertaste of Sakura’s mouth on his. “I want more than just that part of you.”

Sakura didn’t answer, taking another drink of her alcohol in the space between them. The nearly empty glass left a shimmer in Sakura’s eyes and a soft flush on her cheeks as she considered the words. “Why can’t you just be satisfied with what I can offer? You have to miss it.”

“Because I’m selfish,” Kakashi admitted, resting his palms on the cool stone of the counter as if it could keep him grounded in reality. “Because as much as I enjoy the sex, there’s more to you than that.”

“You’re asking me to give up everything,” Sakura began, shaking her head as she hopped off the stool to make herself a second drink.

Disbelieving laughter rumbled in Kakashi’s chest. “This is everything? An empty house and a birthday party you have to pretend not to feel sad during? Being alone every night while you wait for someone who could be here if they wanted to be? He doesn’t have to take these missions all the time, he could—”

The angry words poured out, dousing the desire Kakashi felt moments before as he struggled to hold back his bitterness. Sakura’s eyes never left Kakashi’s as he spoke, hardly reacting to the accusations until they slowed. Then, a cruel smile crossed her lips. “Who said I’m alone every night?”

Kakashi’s heart did a painful double beat, then stopped. The idea that there could be someone else had never crossed his mind. He stared at Sakura like he’d never seen her before, but before he could formulate the question, she sighed. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean that.”

The sentiment couldn’t be recalled, however. Kakashi felt sick with the realization that what he and Sakura had shared could simply be a dot in a string of dalliances while Sasuke was away. He’d never considered that he wasn’t the first and only man she entertained outside of her husband. How many others were there? Who were they? Jealousy, despair, and anger rippled through Kakashi.

A soft touch drew Kakashi away from the darkness in his mind, and he realized that Sakura held his hand. “It’s only ever been you,” she murmured, eyes flashing up to meet his gaze. There was no guilt or deception there, but Kakashi still felt as if the woman had pulled the rug out from under him. Warm fingers caressed Kakashi’s cheek. “Even if I wanted someone else, it wouldn’t be the same.”

Catching Sakura’s hand, Kakashi lowered it. “Thanks, I guess.”

“It’s so easy for you,” Sakura accused, shaking her head. “You have nothing to lose if we don’t work out. You just go back to your life like it never happened. I have to think about Sarada, about the appearance of us together, about my job.”

Sakura ticked off the reasons, one after the other, a litany of why they couldn’t be together. Kakashi nodded with each of them, having told himself the same things dozens of times. When she’d finished, he shook his head. “This isn’t easy for me. Do you know how hard it is to watch the person you love throw themselves away for someone who never deserved them? To cling to something because it’s the safest option?”

The question hung in the air, but Kakashi didn’t need Sakura’s answer. It had always been Sasuke for her, and it would always be. The idea that she was in love with Sasuke had been ingrained in Sakura too long ago for Kakashi to wash it away, no matter how ridiculous it was.

“The person you love.” Sakura repeated each word as if she was enjoying the taste on her tongue.

Kakashi sighed and pushed his fingers through his hair. “Yes,” he answered, refusing to defend the statement further. Sakura knew how he felt, though he’d never said it outright. She had all but accused him of being in love with her the last time they were together.

“Do you think I have anything less to lose?” Kakashi scoffed, shaking his head. “Even if we work out, I’ll always be seen as the man who ruined your marriage. As the creep dating a former student, a woman young enough to be his daughter. Hell, that alone is enough for the elders to question my suitability as the hokage.”

Sakura hummed as if she’d thought the same things. “But?”

“But,” Kakashi repeated with a humorless chuckle. “But, I’d endure all of that in a heartbeat if it changed the way things are.”

Exquisite pain shattered through Kakashi’s chest at the admission, sharper than the ribs he’d broken so many times before. He gestured around the house, refusing to meet Sakura’s gaze. “This is the life you chose for yourself. I can accept that, I have to accept it, but don’t expect me to agree. You deserve better.”

Kakashi started to turn away, but unspoken words weighed his lungs like lead. He exhaled in a ragged burst. “I don’t know if what we could have would be any easier, but at least you’d never doubt that I loved you.”

“Don’t,” Sakura growled, hand slapping hard enough on the counter to crack stone. “Don’t ask me to choose.”

A sad smile crossed Kakashi’s lips. “You already did.”

———————————————–

Kakashi calculated his words to hurt, and they shot through Sakura like a kunai. She huffed out a breath, determined to defend her choice of Sasuke. Kakashi had never looked at her until she’d been married; they’d hardly been friends until the past couple of years. He’d never said anything about caring for her as more than that, and he’d never offered her anything beyond the same casual acknowledgement that he gave Naruto. There hadn’t been a choice when it mattered.

That’s not what he meant, and you know it, a small voice whispered in the back of Sakura’s mind. Guilt swam through her stomach as she looked up at the man across from her. Pain filled Kakashi’s dark eyes, even as he offered a smile to soften the blow of his rejection. Every inch of his face screamed heartache and the longing for something he couldn’t have. Sakura knew it well; she’d felt about Sasuke for years.

“That isn’t fair,” Sakura managed after a couple of pain laced seconds. “I didn’t know how you felt when I married Sasuke. Hell, you probably didn’t know how you felt.”

Kakashi tipped his head in acknowledgement. “You’re right, but we know what we feel now. Or at least, what we felt. This was never just a casual friend with benefits fling, not for me.”

Sakura knew that. She’d known since the first morning that she woke up in Kakashi’s arms. Half hungover and dizzy with guilt, she’d waited for the man to apologize for letting their flirting get that far. Except, Kakashi hadn’t. He’d trailed his fingers over her arm, across her hip, and down her leg. He’d looked at her like he was memorizing every inch of the skin that she’d bared to him the night before.

Then, Kakashi kissed Sakura again and made her body do things she’d only read about in the trashy romance novels that Ino liked so much. Fully sober, Kakashi had chosen Sakura again and left her breathless and desperate for more. He’d been an addiction that she couldn’t see herself stopping. Kakashi was the type of lover that blocked out every question, every doubt, and every insecurity. He looked at Sakura like some goddess, worshiping her body in ways that left her aching for more. At least, he had, until he put a sudden end to their relationship a month ago.

“You were never a fling for me either,” Sakura whispered, though she tasted the beginnings of a lie in her words. She’d used Kakashi at least as much as she’d helped him over the course of their relationship. “Besides, you’re the one who ended things between us.”

Kakashi laughed in disbelief. “I was tearing myself apart for you, and you didn’t notice. Or, if you did, you never cared.”

“Are you happier now,” Sakura shot back, surprised at the venom in her voice. “Is this what you wanted? Our relationship might not have been perfect before, but it was better than this.”

Some emotion crossed Kakashi’s features, but Sakura couldn’t pick up what it was. He exhaled in a steady stream and reached for the drink she’d made him what seemed like an hour earlier. Holding the glass in one hand, Kakashi shook his head and downed the entire thing like a shot. He closed his eyes against the burn of alcohol, and Sakura couldn’t help but think how easy it would have been to step into his space and plant kisses along his jaw. He wanted her enough that his body responded, even if he fought off that attraction. Sakura remained where she was.

“That was the mistake,” Kakashi said, thumping the glass onto the counter. A soft laugh rumbled in his throat. “You’re so young that you can’t tell the difference between love and obsession.”

Sakura wasn’t conscious of moving until her palm connected with Kakashi’s cheek. His head snapped to the side. “Don’t you dare blame this on me,” she growled. “Don’t speak down to me like I’m a child who doesn’t understand how life works. I’ve seen more life and death than most people two and three times my age.”

Kakashi opened and closed his mouth as if testing that his jaw still worked before responding. “It was my fault. I knew better; I knew that this was a mistake, and I did it anyway. I’ll never be satisfied with having one part of you, but that’s all you have left to give.”

“Why did you come today,” Sakura half shouted, trying hard to moderate her tone so she wouldn’t wake Sarada. The girl should have been exhausted from her party and playing all day, but kids were tricky. “Why are you here if you don’t want to fix things between us?”

“I didn’t come for you.” Kakashi’s mouth tightened, the pink outline of Sakura’s handprint starting to show on his cheek. “I knew we’d probably have this conversation, but today wasn’t about you.”

Sakura blinked, pieces tumbling into place with a clarity that left her breathless. Nausea nearly dropped her to her knees. “That present wasn’t from Sasuke. You bought it and put his name on the tag. Why?”

“Because I’ve fought my whole life to make Konoha a place where kids can have both their parents in their lives,” Kakashi shook his head. “We bled for the idea of peace and hope for a better future, and I’ll be damned if I’m going to let him ruin that for her. Not yet.”

The words hung in the air like the smoke after a paper bomb. Sakura stared at Kakashi as if he was a stranger. Her voice failed when she tried to ask why, replaying the joy on Sarada’s face when she opened the gift she thought was from her father. Sakura should have thought to do what Kakashi had done. She should have been the one protecting her daughter from the cruelty of the truth, but she’d been too wrapped up with the million things that needed to be done.

Sakura tried to speak a second time but only managed a weak croak of Kakashi’s name. Then an uncomfortable realization settled in her gut . She studied the hardness of the man’s features and shame roiled through her like a thundercloud. “You’ve never talked about your parents,” she realized, whispering the words aloud.

“You never asked,” Kakashi shot back in an uncharacteristic show of temper. He rubbed a hand over his face and sighed.

Stepping closer, Sakura rested a hand on Kakashi’s forearm. “I’m asking now.”

Kakashi squeezed his eyes shut as if the question was too heavy to bear, and Sakura saw the same flash of humanity in him that she’d seen so long ago. He wasn’t a superhuman, above emotion and feeling, he’d just learned to bury those parts of himself. Sakura knew that, she’d seen it when they were together, but to see it brought out again made her sad in a way she couldn’t explain. She realized how little she knew about Kakashi’s past despite the years they’d spent together as friends, then the months as lovers.

Sakura tightened her fingers against Kakashi’s arm. “Tell me about them.”

“I don’t want to do this,” Kakashi breathed, voice tight with pain. He exhaled hard like they’d been training for an hour and shook his head. “I can’t have the thing I want, and the rest of it doesn’t matter.”

“I want to understand.” Sakura rose with Kakashi, following him as he walked toward the door. He put his shoes on in silence, and she felt an overwhelming sense of loss at the idea of things going back to the way they had been. “Please, I can’t go back to how we’ve been treating each other.”

Kakashi’s shoulders sank, and he paused with one hand on the door. For a minute, Sakura didn’t think he would answer. Then, a sigh rumbled in his chest as he turned. “And, I won’t be your secret any longer.”

Sakura opened her mouth to say that Kakashi had all of her, that she wanted to give him everything, or that it was more complicated than he realized, but the admissions clung to her throat. He offered another smile. “Goodnight, Sakura.”

————————————————————————-

The room spun, tipping and turning around Kakashi as he fumbled a bottle back onto his nightstand. If he closed his eyes, he became less aware of the spinning. His stomach heaved, unhappy at the amount of alcohol that he’d dumped into it without food or water to cushion the blow. Tired and angry as he was, Kakashi couldn’t bring himself to care. Each breath was a physical pain that seared through his chest like a knife.

Kakashi had gone to Sarada’s party knowing that it was a mistake. He’d waited as long as possible, hoping against hope that Sasuke would wrap up his mission in time to be home. Kakashi convinced himself that he could leave Sakura and Sarada behind if Sasuke was there to take care of them. But, he never was. It had been four weeks of empty days and long nights. Weeks of staring at his phone, wondering if he’d made the right decision when he left Sakura.

The pain hadn’t dulled with the passage of time. If anything, it had grown sharper. Kakashi and Sakura had gone for weeks without talking before. He understood that her life was busy with a young child, a blossoming career, and a sometimes husband. The fact that the latter hadn’t been an issue didn’t make things better. Kakashi knew that he’d hurt Sakura when he left, knew that she wanted to go back to the way things were, but he couldn’t. Now that he’d faced that demon, he knew the truth. He loved Sakura too much to be happy with just half of her, no matter how amazing that half was.

Is this what you wanted? Kakashi had waited for those words a month, but Sakura didn’t follow them up with anything that meant they had a future. She wanted Kakashi to be a convenient friend who made her feel the things that her husband didn’t. But, she wouldn’t risk her image or marriage to make it permanent. Kakashi would always be the shadow behind Sasuke.

Taking another swig of whiskey, Kakashi allowed himself to wonder about Sasuke and Sakura’s marriage. He knew that she felt abandoned and disappointed more often than she felt cherished. If not, she wouldn’t have come alive under his touch. She’d gone from throwing herself into dangerous behavior in Kiri because she was hurt to flourishing. The haunted expression left Sakura’s eyes and her smile came more often. She laughed the way she once had, without a shadow of sadness in every movement. Or, maybe that’s just how she’d been around Kakashi.

The memory welled in Kakashi’s throat, and he wondered if he’d left Sakura better than he’d found her. The idea that he’d made things worse for the woman left a sick taste in the back of his throat. He had ended things for the right reasons, for the same ones that should have stopped her from entering his hotel room all those months ago. But, being right didn’t seem to matter as much as it once had. The ache didn’t care whether it was right or wrong; Kakashi missed and wanted her despite the sacrifices that he’d have to make.

Kakashi fumbled his phone off the nightstand and opened the messages, skimming over the past two texts that Sakura had sent. Even if someone had seen them, they were innocuous, carefully crafted to show nothing. She’d apologized and asked if they could talk about things, but she could have just as easily been talking about a disagreement over patient assessment as the end of their relationship. Even the text about missing him was veiled in friendship, suggesting it had been a while since they’d seen each other and they should catch up soon.

“Then, I had to go to the party,” Kakashi slurred to the darkness of his bedroom. He’d wanted to get Sarada a gift from Sasuke, not because he cared what the girl thought about her dad in specifics so much as generalities. He could have offloaded it on Shikamaru and asked the man to take the package with no questions asked. It would have made sense, having the Hokage’s office looking after the children of shinobi currently out of the village, especially a former student. He supposed that they’d both gotten good at hiding things in plain sight.

Kakashi had wanted to see Sakura though, no matter what reasons he came up with for attending the party. He’d wanted to see how she was doing, and how she’d fared after the split between them. The woman had been worn down, exhausted and overspent with the party. Kakashi saw the tension of her shoulders, the breathy, sharp quality of her words, and the way her eyes pinched in exhaustion. The past few weeks hadn’t been easy on her, but she’d soldiered on as she always did. Without either Kakashi or Sasuke, Sakura kept going, and she always would. The woman’s resilience was one of her most attractive features.

If Kakashi had been stupid to go to the party, he’d been stupider to stay afterwards. When he closed his eyes, he could feel the sticky warmth of Sakura’s lips against his. The contact alone had been almost enough for Kakashi to ignore every reason not to sleep with her. He had wanted to pull Sakura against his body, spin their positions and settle her on the counter he’d been leaning against. His body ached for the contact, even now with the memory brighter than the reality had been. Sakura would have surrendered to him without question. The sex had always been the easiest part of their relationship.

Even now, the buzz of desire left Kakashi dizzy under the alcohol’s influence. He checked his silent phone once more and considered typing out how much he missed and wanted Sakura. Kakashi was too drunk to go back to her apartment tonight, and she needed to stay with Sarada anyway. Kakashi could call her, he supposed. They’d done that once when she’d been away for work and he’d stayed in the village because there was no reason to follow her. Sasuke had been out of town then, as well.

Kakashi’s body gave a soft twitch at the memory of Sakura’s voice over the line, full of heat and desire as she described what she’d been doing, and what she would have done to him if they’d been together. Exhaling through his nose, Kakashi stared down at his phone. It would be easy, and it wouldn’t cross as many lines as actually sleeping with her. Steadying his breath, Kakashi let his hand slide lower, imagining the ways Sakura had touched him so many times before.

Closing callused fingers around himself, Kakashi used the other hand to swipe to Sakura’s contact information. He shuddered, body oversensitive after so long without any contact. Kakashi’s left thumb hovered over the call button, then raised to brush over her picture. The screen lit up, enlarging the small icon to the full image. Kakashi stared into those sparkling green eyes that had captivated him for months, maybe even years.

Kakashi’s hand moved of its own accord, body responding without waiting for his permission or conscious thought. It would be as easy as dialing the number, his mind suggested, through its alcohol induced haze. She’ll answer and you can remember what it felt like again. The way she felt on your body, her mouth around you—groaning against the pounding of his heartbeat in his ears, Kakashi dropped the phone face down on the bed beside him and jerked his shirt toward his chest with his free hand. Warmth splattered across his stomach as his hips jumped in his hand.

The high wore off almost instantly, washed away by a tide of frustration and emptiness. Kakashi opened his eyes to the loneliness of his bedroom, and the fantasy that he’d created scattered in the darkness. A sob caught in his throat as he reached for his phone and threw it across the room.

——————————————————————–

Thick clouds cloaked the village of Konoha, the deepest hours of night providing the darkness that Sasuke preferred to move in. His chakra brushed against the invisible barrier that protected the village only because he allowed it to be picked up. There was no reason to hide his return, at least not this time, but he still moved in the shadows of the silent streets. Midnight had come and gone, a distant memory that left him closer to dawn than dusk. Sasuke hardly noticed; a sleep schedule wasn’t something that he cared to keep up with.

Only a handful of lights filled the windows at this hour, but it wasn’t unusual in a shinobi village. Much like Sasuke, shinobi had missions and tasks at all hours of the night. But, the single light glowing from the home that Sakura had chosen for them was strange. Sasuke stared at it for a moment, wondering if something was wrong, but he didn’t sense any danger.

Sasuke unlocked the door and slipped inside, removing his sandals at the threshold. There were no voices in the house, so Sakura had probably left the light on by accident. She was likely asleep in their bed—the sound of glass clinking against stone brought Sasuke up short. He padded through the entry, wondering what made the noise. He couldn’t imagine any scenario where Sakura would be out of bed at this hour unless something was terribly wrong.

When Sasuke rounded the corner, Sakura sat at one of the hgh stools beside the island counter. She leaned heavily against the surface, a glass held in one hand. An open bottle of vodka waited beside her. The sight made Sasuke’s eyes widen; it was an expensive brand, not the swill that she and Ino mixed into fruity cocktails. A clear, sticky patina shone on the side of the cup; she’d been drinking the alcohol straight.

Sakura pushed into a sitting position, staring at Sasuke through red, puffy eyes. He frowned, wondering how much she’d been drinking to look as disheveled as she did. “You’re home,” she mumbled after a couple of awkward seconds.

“Yes.” Sasuke nodded, closing the distance between then in three easy strides. “What’s this about, then?”

“Could you have been here,” Sakura ignored the question without seeming to hear it. An undercurrent of anger heated her voice, bright and deadly. “Did you miss it intentionally?”

Sasuke opened his mouth to answer, then stopped and considered . It? What was itsupposed to mean? He wasn’t the best at keeping up with dates when on mission, usually because he was so far from civilization where things like that mattered. He stared at his wife with a blank expression until a bitter laugh spilled out of her. “You don’t fucking remember, do you?”

Sakura dropped her feet to the polished tiles of their kitchen floor and made a move to storm past Sasuke. The alcohol left her off balance, and she stumbled. He caught his wife with one hand on her shoulder. Growling, Sakura ripped away from him. Sasuke stepped back, giving her the space she so clearly wanted.

As he did so, the man’s eyes scanned the house with a critical eye. It was almost perfectly in order, but a pile of unused paper plates rested on the table next to matching napkins. A stray balloon, bright pink, clung to the ceiling in the corner of the room along with a curled spray of ribbon. The type you’d use for a birthday. Shit.Sasuke felt the air leave his lungs in a soft whoosh of disappointment.

“I missed your birthday,” Sasuke reasoned aloud, starting to reach for Sakura. If he could take her in his arms, he might be able to make her forget the annoyance. Though, he wasn’t good with that part of their relationship either. Sasuke usually just let Sakura work out her anger whenever she was ready rather than trying to fix it himself. “I’m sorry.”

Sakura stood with her back to Sasuke, not speaking. A fine tremble of emotion worked through her body, strong enough to feel without chakra or touch. Sasuke had missed birthdays before, and she’d always been reasonable about it. Of everyone in Konoha, Sakura understood that he had to sacrifice some things for the good of others. She’d never been angry about it before, never… Sasuke’s stomach tightened with realization. “Sarada.”

For a second, the word hung in the air between them. Then, Sakura scoffed. “I’m surprised you know her name.”

Sasuke had taken more wounds than most men over his lifetime, but the accusation in Sakura’s voice cut deeper than any of them. He reached for his wife’s arm, half to apologize and half to pull her against him, as if their bodies could smother out the pain. But, his hand never completed the journey. “That isn’t fair,” he whispered.

Sakura wobbled when she spun to face Sasuke, nearly falling when her feet tangled. “No,” she growled, voice sharp enough to draw blood. “You do not get to say that. Don’t talk to me about fucking fair. I have sacrificed everything for this family, for you. And, for what?”

The woman gestured around their meticulously groomed home, taking in the perfect photos on the wall and the shiny white cabinets in the kitchen. She scoffed at the back of her throat. “You know what isn’t fair? Someone else bought your daughter a birthday present, pretending it was from you. Everyone else came to her party to celebrate. I cooked and bought and planned and decorated and cleaned and everything else it took.”

“And you, you couldn’t even remember the day,” Sakura’s fury built to a fever pitch that almost reached a shout. “It isn’t fair that you tout this line about saving everyone else while you ignore the cost to our daughter.”

It’s not a line, it’s the truth, Sasuke thought, but he pulled the words inside and held them there. Sakura wouldn’t appreciate the realization or the cool indifference with which he delivered it. He exhaled. “I’m making the village safe for her too,” he offered instead.

Angry tears filled Sakura’s eyes, clinging to her lashes and spilling black streaks down her already darkened cheeks. “And, it’s still not enough.”

A sob rose in Sakura’s throat as she stumbled from the kitchen, navigating the steps to their bedroom by muscle memory more than anything else in her inebriated state. Sasuke watched her go, wondering if he should go after her. He suspected that she wouldn’t welcome his presence, much less his touch at the moment. He’d failed, again.

Sighing, Sasuke turned back to the counter and picked up the cap for the vodka and spun it on the top. He wasn’t concerned about Sakura drinking, not really, though this had been more than a little. The woman’s medical ninjutsu and seal helped her metabolize the alcohol more quickly than most people, much like Tsunade. But, he wondered at the timing. Had she been that upset about him not being here for the party, or was there something else?

Sasuke recalled Sakura’s bloodshot eyes when he’d first walked into the room. She’d been crying before he got home, not because she was angry at him. At least, not from the fight that left her presumably sobbing on their bed upstairs. Something else had upset her, or she’d been already upset over the accusations that she’d lobbed at him when he got home. Sasuke wasn’t sure that he wanted to know which.

Carrying the vodka across the kitchen, Sasuke put it away without taking a drink. He had no desire to lose himself in the heat, everything hurt enough already. Sakura’s glass had thumped to the counter when she spun away in fury, lying on its side on the granite surface. When he reached for it, Sasuke noticed the second glass. He frowned and picked it up, inspecting the drink like it might reveal some answer.

Sasuke decided that was a question for another day. He ran both glasses beneath a stream of warm water and left them in the sink. Drying his hands on a towel on the counter, Sasuke glanced toward the stairs. He wished that he could erase the distance between himself and Sakura with a few easy words, but it had never been that simple.

Walking to the front of the house, Sasuke slipped his feet back into his sandals. Naruto had an open couch policy as long as Sasuke was willing to talk about what led him to the man’s door. The blonde had an unshakable belief that Sasuke and Sakura would make their relationship work out in the end. Sometimes, Sasuke thought the blond’s faith was the only thing that kept him believing in his marriage.

Sighing, Sasuke stepped back into the night.

loading