"determined bowmaiden" 🎀🏹🎀 sayori (
hxppythxughts) wrote in
imaginarynetwork2020-08-28 12:17 am
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01, text | un: dearsunshine
hi everyone!!! \(^▽^ ⋈)/ if we havent met or u dont remember me yet my name is sayori!!!
i remembered i used to write a lot and parfaitgirls poem rly inspired me
so i wanted to make a VERY IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT!!! 《《o(≧◇≦)o》》
i went to the roswell center bc i wanted to read some baislan poetry
and while i was there i asked if they had a club where ppl could talk about writing
and it turns out they didnt! ( ̄ヘ ̄)
but someone heard me ask about it and got RLY EXCITED
so we got some of the students together to start a literature club there!!! ☆*:.。.__〆(⌒▽⌒ ⋈)
so if u like to read or write and talk about literature u should come to the roswell center in the afternoons for literature club!
i may not be there every day bc we have a lot to do LOL but i should be there p often (´。• ᵕ •。`)
and ur welcome to come by if ur just curious too!!! (⁀ᗢ⁀) writing is rly nice but u wont know if u like it until u try!!!
and since this is abt literature i thought itd be a good idea to share one of my poems here too
if u want to tell me what u think then consider it a trial run for the literature club wwwwww (⋈ ≧▽≦)ノシ))
[As promised, there is also a photo of a page in a notebook!it's in two images bc it was huge otherwise but it's one page i promise]

(transcription available here)
i remembered i used to write a lot and parfaitgirls poem rly inspired me
so i wanted to make a VERY IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT!!! 《《o(≧◇≦)o》》
i went to the roswell center bc i wanted to read some baislan poetry
and while i was there i asked if they had a club where ppl could talk about writing
and it turns out they didnt! ( ̄ヘ ̄)
but someone heard me ask about it and got RLY EXCITED
so we got some of the students together to start a literature club there!!! ☆*:.。.__〆(⌒▽⌒ ⋈)
so if u like to read or write and talk about literature u should come to the roswell center in the afternoons for literature club!
i may not be there every day bc we have a lot to do LOL but i should be there p often (´。• ᵕ •。`)
and ur welcome to come by if ur just curious too!!! (⁀ᗢ⁀) writing is rly nice but u wont know if u like it until u try!!!
and since this is abt literature i thought itd be a good idea to share one of my poems here too
if u want to tell me what u think then consider it a trial run for the literature club wwwwww (⋈ ≧▽≦)ノシ))
[As promised, there is also a photo of a page in a notebook!


(transcription available here)
no subject
i definitely made it just for you
you should keep it
[She'd say the same thing regardless of what she felt on the other end of the Oath. Still, she doesn't understand right away. She has to make a few leaps of logic. He was sad to read the poem she posted here, because it meant that she was sad.
So for him to be feeling this amount of sick, conflicted worry, there must be something even sadder in that book. Right?]
are you ok?
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[Still, it doesn't wash away the sick feeling. He hedges, thumb rubbing a slight smudge on the page.]
not rly
im not sure what to do
theres some stuff in here that it feels weird i know and you dont
are you
do you wanna look at it
you dont have to
but i dont know how to explain it otherwise
but i can try
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But it's not fair to ask Mista to hold this, either. And...she has to keep looking. Even if what she finds is a creeping black critter.]
its okay you dont have to do that
i want to see it
im just
[A pause. The typing indicator shows a lot of attempts to write something.]
im scared ill read it all and still wont be able to remember writing it
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i get that
i dont remember writing mine and some of them are about things that happened that are really bad
some of those things i dont remember either
if you dont wanna look at it today its ok
i just need to know youre ok
and it can wait until another time
or if you wanna do it now im gonna be here with you
either way i love you a lot
[All he can do — all he has to do — is walk the path with her. Whatever it ends up being. That's what he's here for.]
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i love you too
so so so much
i think i wanna do it now before i lose my nerve lol
i can come find u if thats ok
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come find me
ill be ready
[He's in his cabana when she finds him, having sent a firmly-worded text to Alex that he is Not to return to the cabana for at least an hour. This text was then followed by equally firmly-worded texts denying any hanky-panky. "Sad memory shit" and "girl crying" finally ends the conversation. It's a very stupid conversation.]
[Once it's resolved, he sighs and throws his arm over the back of the couch, looking out towards the ocean. Man. This is gonna be hard.]
> action
This is a less uncomfortable preoccupation than the hanky-panky conversation, at least.
She sidles up to the cabana a little more casually than she really means to, her steps both idle and bouncy as she ducks around the privacy curtain. Despite the circumstances and the slight furrow in her brow, she smiles when she sees him, because just seeing him makes her happy.] Found you.
[Like hide and seek? Get it?]
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Hey. Does that make me it now?
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I'm not gonna hide though, [and she plops down on the couch next to him, settling underneath his arm] so maybe we can both be it.
[And she won't have to search alone, so maybe he won't have to be so sad about it.]
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That sounds good. [He kisses the crown of her head and pulls the book into his lap, resting mostly on the leg that bumps up against hers.] Two heads are better than one and all that.
[. . . It occurs to him that maybe he could offer to trade with her, later. She could help him seek, too. But not right now. This is already a lot.]
I dunno how you wanna do this. From the beginning or . . .
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It's hot, and Mista runs warm, and she's already way too toasty but she's absolutely not moving from this spot. This is her spot. It feels right to be here, so this is where she's going to stay, especially after that soft kiss.
She hums in thought.] From the beginning. I've been writing in my journal since I— remembered that I do that, so...I think I probably would've told the story in order in this book.
[And if that's how she told it, that's probably how she should read it.]
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Okay. I'm ready when you are. [Steady. Not nervous, not really. He might be in a little bit, depending on what happens, but for now he's calm at her side.]
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[So she reaches for the book. Gingerly, even though she knows she's the one who made it, because— even though she made it, it's not hers. It's Mista's. So she's careful, so careful as she opens the front cover and starts to read.
It's her own handwriting, without a doubt. It's exactly how she would say the things this says, the little note at the beginning that explains her reasoning for giving this to him.
The first poem strikes her instantly with nostalgia. Dear Sunshine. The first poem that she shared with...the Literature Club (wow, that explains a lot.) The first poem that she shared with anyone, she knows. The actual poem is cute. It makes her smile. The notes, though—
It's about that boy.
She keeps reading.
Bottles. If Dear Sunshine was happy nostalgia, Bottles is the sad kind. The melancholy in it feels like home, after you've turned all the lights off to listen to a rainstorm outside. The similarities with the poem she just shared strike her immediately, so much that she almost feels like she doesn't need to read the notes.
She does, though. And speaks again after a moment; not about the conflicted knot of feelings, or the facts she can infer from the book, or the shards of memory that still aren't entirely coming back to her, but...something she wants to know nonetheless.] Which one's your favorite?
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[The feelings that are building into a complex, indescribable shape in her chest are still on his mind when she asks him that question; still on his mind when his expression goes from pensive and attentive to purely happy, as he ducks his head and leans over the book.]
Lights. My favorite one is Lights. I like all of 'em, but this one is—
[He flips the page over to it, and realizes he doesn't have to say it. It's all right there in Sayori's own words. His crooked grin is almost too fierce to speak through, but he says it again anyway.] This one's my favorite.
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This is out of order, she realizes, but — that's suddenly not nearly as important as his happiness and seeing whatever made him that happy. And. Well. It's easier to focus on this, anyway.
It hits her like a bludgeon within the first stanza: this is a love poem. The tips of her fingers brush the paper as she reads and almost, faintly, just barely remembers as she impressed her love upon the page with each letter. Her face starts to burn with a fierce blush about halfway through, but she doesn't realize it, too caught up in the fond fuzziness that's gradually forming itself into...moments. Not the whole thing, but moments.
She reads through the notes, but again, it feels unnecessary. In fact, it brings her more questions than answers (Sex Pistols? Shadowdale? A lot of stuff happened between us, but what?) Despite that, she's still more preoccupied with the echoing fondness in her chest which gets stronger as it reverberates through her.
Eventually, it bubbles out of her in a kind of watery laugh, and she says with some revelation:] You kissed me when I showed you this one.
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Yeah! 'Course I did. What was I supposed to do, not kiss you when you wrote something like that about me?
[Don't be ridiculous.]
[Shuffling a little, he pulls out his notebook from the inside of the couch. There's a bookmark in it, on a particular page.]
Uh, I realized that I'm pretty sure I did one about you, too. I dunno if you wanna read it, but . . .
[Well. He nudges it forward until it's balanced precisely on their touching knees.]
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She means to clarify about the kiss, but staring directly into that grin has rendered her brainless. Only him pulling out the notebook grabs her attention, and her eyes go wide with wonder as she regards the bookmark that peeks out from it.]
You...wrote about me? Really? [Awe and some disbelief, though not in bad faith. She's just— surprised? And it does something funny to her emotionally, something swelling and overwhelming before she even reads the damn thing.
Of course she wants to read it. She slips her finger against the bookmark to open the notebook up to that page.]
—hey, it matches mine. [Lights and Shadows. That's so cute. It's more than cute, actually, but she gets caught up in reading the rest before she can linger on that.
This poem says some things that catch in the back of Sayori's head. Loose threads snagging unpleasantly on sharp hooks as they drag across her mind. She ignores them, because this isn't the first thing on this island that's given her that feeling, and they're not as important right now as everything else. Everything else being the absolutely crushing mass of affection inside of her, of course, and things that she definitely starts to remember about this poem. Things that she remembers about Mista, because they're the same thing. Reading someone's writing is like getting to know them.
The feeling is like the first time she read it at the same time that it's comforting familiarity, the feeling of having read something so many times that you've memorized it.
When she's done, she exhales a sharp, rattling breath. Lifts her head, lifts her hand, and then grabs his chin and turns his face toward her so that she can kiss him, deep and lingering.]
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[There are other hard things in the poem. Callouts, kind of, but not really — things that are true about her, that he must have written because he knew and cared enough to put them down on paper, because they're things he loves about her, too. All the dips and peaks, lights and shadows.]
[All the complicated things she's feeling right now, he loves those too. They're part of her, so he loves them. As she rides the wave, down and then all the way up again, he leans against her gently, shoulder against hers just to feel the contact and the temperature of her body by his side.]
[He does and doesn't expect the kiss. Maybe more accurate would be to say he feels like any moment could metamorphosize into a kiss, and this one seems especially like a kissing moment. So she takes his chin in her hand, and he moves in at the same time she does, not surprised, not ready either, just there with her, following her lead.]
[His hand buries in her hair, fingers curving automatically to cradle the curve of her skull. They kiss, and it's like the first time plus the time after he gave her the poem, neither of which he remembers clearly, both of which he can grasp the feeling of with perfect clarity. Two types of tenderness, slightly different. This time is both.]
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Her cheeks heat in a way that's sort of overwhelmed. Layers upon layers of familiarity, feelings and memories that come along with kissing him like this. She remembers other instances, and they're like the points of a constellation: nothing between them, but it's easy enough to imagine how the lines would connect it all.
And a picture of the two of them, somewhere in the shape those lines make. Together. Safe.
He holds her to him the way one might hold a treasure. It makes the idea of separating from him almost impossible. There's a part of her that just wants to sink into this and get carried away wherever it leads, but — there's so much in her heart, too many questions and answers both. Still, she lets herself feel the pull of the current as her mouth closes over his bottom lip and the tip of her tongue brushes against it, one slow second before she pulls back.
Not far. Just giving herself enough space to talk, still close enough to feel his breath. So close that her lips still faintly brush his as she speaks, murmured into the air between them like a secret.] You showed me this poem on our first date. And when I showed you mine was our first kiss. My first kiss.
[Do you remember? she doesn't ask. It's okay if he doesn't yet. Even if his mind can't remember, his heart does; she can feel it.]
no subject
[At least she doesn't go far. At least he thinks he can still feel her heartbeat in the space between them. Brows furrowed in kiss-addled confusion, he looks at her and tries to decipher what she's saying. First date, first kiss. Her first kiss.]
[Does he remember?]
[Closing his eyes against the world, he leans his forehead against hers and breathes in. Remembers something, the shapes around the reality, then a moment in time; the world around it blurs, doesn't exist, a fog in a vast and empty world. But they're there, the two of them, curled towards each other on a blanket. He remembers thinking about her all night, how cute she was, how happy he was to be next to her — and then she gave him that, out of nowhere. Words in rows, all about him. About them.]
[His eyes open again, but only halfway, only to take in the sight of her again.]
. . . Yeah. You really got me, huh? Nobody ever said anything like that about me before.
[A beat; a breath.]
I really love you, Sayori.
no subject
She can still relish their closeness while he sits in it, at least. Ponders on whatever her statement has brought to the surface of his mind. His breath is warm against her face and the fabric of his hat is soft against her forehead.
She's smiling as he opens his eyes, quiet reverence in the way she looks at him. And she lights up as their gazes meet, cheeks gone a little pink with the kissing and the— the words. The everything. Her heart feels so full — it aches with complicated fullness, and she's kind of afraid she might burst from it all.
She laughs faintly, reflexive and fond.] I felt it. In your poem, I mean. All the love you put into it.
[Her thumb strokes a little line along his chin where she still holds him in a relaxed grip.] I love you too. It's crazy that I'm the first one to say stuff like that, because you're really amazing.
no subject
You think? [That it's crazy, not that he is those things; he doesn't doubt her feelings in the least, wouldn't even if they didn't have the Oath because her verses speak volumes.] I guess I never thought about it before you said 'em . . . I thought . . .
[He can't help himself, leans forward incrementally and kisses her lightly on the lips, needing to feel that connection more than anything else.]
I wanted to say things like that to somebody. Real romantic. I didn't realize I wanted to be swept off my feet so bad until you were already sweeping.
no subject
Before you? Nah.
She remembers that, and as she remembers the sound of his voice making the words, the scene comes back to her, in foggy bits and pieces. She remembers what followed that, I thought people'd just be mad I fucked up their clothes, what they were talking about, and—
He kisses her, and the delicate flush in her face ceases to be delicate as she remembers the sensation of his kiss elsewhere. She goes from soft pink to embarrassingly red — it's partially the memory, and partially what Mista says in the here and now, which is so ridiculously sweet that her heart does a dumb little flip in her chest. It makes her sound way more competent at this romance thing than she actually is.
A laugh, breathless and high as she flusters.] Th-that's— me? Sweeping? I just, I mean—
[It's kind of funny, the quiet way she loses her composure. Because she's reluctant to be too loud and disrupt this moment of closeness, but she's clearly vibrating as she turns the sentiment over in her head and struggles to meet his eyes with her goofy grin.] I just wrote it because it's true. And— I showed you because you are amazing and you deserve to hear it, and I'm not very good at saying that stuff on the spot, so— so I only knew how to say it in a poem.
[Her hand moves to his cheek, her knuckles brushing fondly along it as another bubble of embarrassed laughter escapes her. It's hard to comprehend what she feels from him: this...perfect, impenetrable faith. But it feels nice.] But you got to say it to someone like you wanted, too. So I guess you won twice, huh?
no subject
[It’s a quiet, brief kiss, his breath coming slow and even when he pulls back. Not very far, but far enough; the space between them is so small that it creates some sense of secrecy, like they’re hiding out somewhere no one can see them, sharing stories no one else can know.]
[Maybe it’s kind of like that. Other people could know, but they wouldn’t know all of it. The two of them are the only ones who can feel the easy understanding and openhearted love of their Oath.]
Man, I keep winning. I can’t seem to stop. Every time you smile at me it’s another win.
[Cheesy. Honest. Another openhearted thing; he holds it out to her, entirely unassuming, because he loves her. Loving her is what he thinks he might be best at.]
Hey. I dunno if I ever said, but . . . thank you. For taking a chance on all this. Not even just me, but any of this — I know it’s hard, you know? It means a lot to me that you felt like taking that risk was worth it. [A pause before he clarifies:] That you trusted me that much. That means everything to me, Sayori.
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It feels like home.
She smiles again as he says that, bashful but earnest. Another win.
The next part, though, she has to think about. Which is a little frustrating, because half of it's that there's still so much she can't remember. She has enough trouble articulating her feelings even with all the pieces in place — it feels desperately unfair to have to seek out the bits that make this feeling make sense.
A deep, thoughtful sigh follows as her eyes flick down between them, trying to dig the right words out of her head.] ...I never wanted anyone to worry about me, you know? I only wanted to make people happy. So it felt like it'd mess everything up if I stopped smiling.
But...you seemed so happy just to know me. Even when I couldn't smile. I— [She pauses, hiccups over a breath of watery laughter as facts about her home return to her. Chopped up memories of a club full of people afraid to show their true feelings. People she loves dearly, but was only just beginning to understand, because they all held so much of themselves back.] I don't think anyone ever smiled at me the way you did before I came here, ahaha.
Even after... [After what? After something. Something dark and terrible, the sharp hooks that the threads of their poetry snagged on, something that her brain still can't unravel just yet.] You saw something really awful, right? But you still said that I gave you something to believe in.
[That's what he said, isn't it? That's not all, but it comes out of her mouth before that part has even properly come back to her. Something she's held onto so dearly that her heart tells her before her brain does.] So— if knowing me made you that happy, then I knew it was okay, even if it was scary. It was worth it to get to see you smile so much.
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