prillalar (
prillalar) wrote in
writetomyheart2017-03-24 07:56 am
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[Team Seven] Ghost Story
A little Bokuto/Kuroo fluff because I'm slammed right now.
“A lingering presence drifted through the room, filling the air with an icy chill. Cold fingers grabbed the back of Tsubaki’s neck and dragged him down into the pit.” Kuroo grabbed the back of Tuskishima’s neck but instead of screaming, Tuskishima just gave Kuroo a blank but somehow still obviously disrespectful look. Hinata, on the other hand, was wide eyed and open mouth, but that didn’t interest Kuroo at all.
“Is that the end?” Tsukishima said, with no appreciation whatsoever for Kuroo’s storytelling artistry. And stood up. And left, the stairwell door clanging behind him.
Hinata clutched Lev’s arm as they stumbled out too and Kuroo wished good luck to him. But his own night was wasted.
He stood and stretched, working out his sore muscles and stiff tendons. Maybe the story wasn’t scary enough. But it had worked on him, at least enough, when he had been a first year. He started to leave the room but was yanked back by cold fingers grabbing his wrist.
“Don’t leave me alone with the lingering presence, Kuroo!”
Kuroo looked down at Bokuto. He was even wider-eyed and open-mouthed then Hinata. “You know it’s just a story, right?”
“Except I thought it haunted the other stairwell by the cafeteria,” Bokuto said.
“You’ve heard it before?”
“There’s always a spooky noise by the cart you put your tray onto,” Bokuto said. “I think it gets bored in the stairwell so it moves around.”
Kuroo didn’t remember telling this story to Bokuto before. He’d heard it from Suzuki of course, Shinzen’s captain two years ago. But, you know, they had been alone in the stairwell when Suzuki told him the ghost story, in a hushed creepy voice, and slipping his fingers down the back of Kuroo’s neck at the punchline.
It’s not like Kuroo had actually been scared by the story, even though it was a little eerie. But he had been more interested in Suzuki’s attention. Suzuki’s arm around his shoulders and Suzuki’s lips teasing at his mouth. It’s a training camp tradition, Suzuki told him, and Kuroo had been carrying on that fine tradition ever since.
“Wait, you already knew about the stairwell?” Kuroo said.
“Suzuki-san told me,” Bokuto said. “Our first year here.”
“Our first year!” Kuroo shouldn’t be pissed off, it was just a training camp thing, but he was. At least when he used a ghost story to lure a first year into the stairwell, he stuck with the same one for the whole camp. He wasn’t some sort of training camp playboy like, apparently, Suzuki.
“And he told me the secret spell to keep the ghosts away.”
“Let me guess,” Kuroo said. “‘Ghost, ghost, go away. Come again another day.’”
“No!” Bokuto’s eyes widened even more. He jumped to his feet, his fingers still clamped around Kuroo’s wrist. “It’s ‘out out ghost, begone.’ And then we kiss.”
Wow. Apparently Bokuto had believed that was part of the spell. All Suzuki had said to Kuroo was, Do you want to have some fun? “Yeah,” Kuroo said. “That’s exactly what happened with Suzuki and me.”
He disengaged Bokuto’s fingers from his wrist and headed for the door. “Let’s sneak some pudding before bed.”
“What about the ghost?”
There is no ghost, Kuroo started to say but decided it wasn’t worth trying to convince Bokuto. “There might be lemon pudding,” he said.
“We have to say it together.” Bokuto hooked his arm around Kuroo’s neck this time and dragged back to the stairs.
“Okay, okay.” Kuroo chanted the words with Bokuto: “Out out ghost, begone! Now, pudding ti--”
His words were cut off by, of course, Bokuto’s mouth. Because kissing was part of the spell. And not just a peck either. Bokuto was doing the job enthusiastically and thoroughly, his lips clinging to Kuroo’s, then parting, nudging Kuroo’s mouth with the tip of his tongue while his hand slid down Kuroo’s back and didn’t stop until he was cupping Kuroo’s ass.
Not the result Kuroo had expected from his stairwell ghost story party but there was definitely something to be said for kissing someone you didn’t have to teach how first. Especially someone Suzuki had trained. Especially someone you already liked hanging around with.
Bokuto squeezed Kuroo’s butt and Kuroo opened his mouth. Locked his arms around Bokuto’s waist. And kissed back until they were both flushed and ruffled. Until someone else had probably stolen the leftover pudding. Until there were no more ghosts haunting training camp.
Lying in bed, Kuroo decided there might be one more ghost, haunting the much more private storage closet on the second floor.
At breakfast, he set his tray down across from Bokuto and grinned at him. “Feel any lingering presences?”
“Hey!” Bokuto said in an on-the-court yell. “Kiss bro!” He held out his fist. “Bump it!”
Every sleepy head in the cafeteria turned to stare at them. Bokuto’s shining happy morning face was blinding, like it could exorcise any ghost and turn vampires to dust besides.
Kuroo bumped it.
Over to
serratedpearls!
“A lingering presence drifted through the room, filling the air with an icy chill. Cold fingers grabbed the back of Tsubaki’s neck and dragged him down into the pit.” Kuroo grabbed the back of Tuskishima’s neck but instead of screaming, Tuskishima just gave Kuroo a blank but somehow still obviously disrespectful look. Hinata, on the other hand, was wide eyed and open mouth, but that didn’t interest Kuroo at all.
“Is that the end?” Tsukishima said, with no appreciation whatsoever for Kuroo’s storytelling artistry. And stood up. And left, the stairwell door clanging behind him.
Hinata clutched Lev’s arm as they stumbled out too and Kuroo wished good luck to him. But his own night was wasted.
He stood and stretched, working out his sore muscles and stiff tendons. Maybe the story wasn’t scary enough. But it had worked on him, at least enough, when he had been a first year. He started to leave the room but was yanked back by cold fingers grabbing his wrist.
“Don’t leave me alone with the lingering presence, Kuroo!”
Kuroo looked down at Bokuto. He was even wider-eyed and open-mouthed then Hinata. “You know it’s just a story, right?”
“Except I thought it haunted the other stairwell by the cafeteria,” Bokuto said.
“You’ve heard it before?”
“There’s always a spooky noise by the cart you put your tray onto,” Bokuto said. “I think it gets bored in the stairwell so it moves around.”
Kuroo didn’t remember telling this story to Bokuto before. He’d heard it from Suzuki of course, Shinzen’s captain two years ago. But, you know, they had been alone in the stairwell when Suzuki told him the ghost story, in a hushed creepy voice, and slipping his fingers down the back of Kuroo’s neck at the punchline.
It’s not like Kuroo had actually been scared by the story, even though it was a little eerie. But he had been more interested in Suzuki’s attention. Suzuki’s arm around his shoulders and Suzuki’s lips teasing at his mouth. It’s a training camp tradition, Suzuki told him, and Kuroo had been carrying on that fine tradition ever since.
“Wait, you already knew about the stairwell?” Kuroo said.
“Suzuki-san told me,” Bokuto said. “Our first year here.”
“Our first year!” Kuroo shouldn’t be pissed off, it was just a training camp thing, but he was. At least when he used a ghost story to lure a first year into the stairwell, he stuck with the same one for the whole camp. He wasn’t some sort of training camp playboy like, apparently, Suzuki.
“And he told me the secret spell to keep the ghosts away.”
“Let me guess,” Kuroo said. “‘Ghost, ghost, go away. Come again another day.’”
“No!” Bokuto’s eyes widened even more. He jumped to his feet, his fingers still clamped around Kuroo’s wrist. “It’s ‘out out ghost, begone.’ And then we kiss.”
Wow. Apparently Bokuto had believed that was part of the spell. All Suzuki had said to Kuroo was, Do you want to have some fun? “Yeah,” Kuroo said. “That’s exactly what happened with Suzuki and me.”
He disengaged Bokuto’s fingers from his wrist and headed for the door. “Let’s sneak some pudding before bed.”
“What about the ghost?”
There is no ghost, Kuroo started to say but decided it wasn’t worth trying to convince Bokuto. “There might be lemon pudding,” he said.
“We have to say it together.” Bokuto hooked his arm around Kuroo’s neck this time and dragged back to the stairs.
“Okay, okay.” Kuroo chanted the words with Bokuto: “Out out ghost, begone! Now, pudding ti--”
His words were cut off by, of course, Bokuto’s mouth. Because kissing was part of the spell. And not just a peck either. Bokuto was doing the job enthusiastically and thoroughly, his lips clinging to Kuroo’s, then parting, nudging Kuroo’s mouth with the tip of his tongue while his hand slid down Kuroo’s back and didn’t stop until he was cupping Kuroo’s ass.
Not the result Kuroo had expected from his stairwell ghost story party but there was definitely something to be said for kissing someone you didn’t have to teach how first. Especially someone Suzuki had trained. Especially someone you already liked hanging around with.
Bokuto squeezed Kuroo’s butt and Kuroo opened his mouth. Locked his arms around Bokuto’s waist. And kissed back until they were both flushed and ruffled. Until someone else had probably stolen the leftover pudding. Until there were no more ghosts haunting training camp.
Lying in bed, Kuroo decided there might be one more ghost, haunting the much more private storage closet on the second floor.
At breakfast, he set his tray down across from Bokuto and grinned at him. “Feel any lingering presences?”
“Hey!” Bokuto said in an on-the-court yell. “Kiss bro!” He held out his fist. “Bump it!”
Every sleepy head in the cafeteria turned to stare at them. Bokuto’s shining happy morning face was blinding, like it could exorcise any ghost and turn vampires to dust besides.
Kuroo bumped it.
Over to
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"At least when he used a ghost story to lure a first year into the stairwell, he stuck with the same one for the whole camp"
omg so indignant ahahahahahahahha best kuroo.
KUROO TOTALLY BUMPED THAT.
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