my babies kuroken (already read)
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Recent works
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Summary
Lev suggests they play Secret Santa. What on earth could go wrong with that suggestion?
Or:
This cold, bitter winter, Kenma realizes something he should have known all along.
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Summary
Kuroo’s hand is still on Kenma’s jaw. Kenma wants more, wants another now. He leans forward, and Kuroo is there meeting him half-way. He lets his hands fall to Kuroo’s thighs in front of him. The second kiss is more. He keeps his eyes closed when Kuroo moves away this time. Kuroo’s voice sounds too loud in the space, but maybe he’s just closer than he usually is to his friend. “Is that what you wanted?”
Kenma opens his eyes; he nods. “For now.” He stands up and moves toward the door. He doesn’t turn around, lets his heart beat in his eardrums as he flees from the room.
(OR Kenma and Kuroo and friends with benefits)
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It's usually weekly or bi-weekly that Kuroo brings over flowers of some sort, a kind of habit he's kept up over all the years they've been friends. Sometimes Kenma wishes he had asked the first time it ever happened, because he can't help but wonder now. Why don't you just keep them in your room if you like them? Does this mean anything to you?
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“Even if it is kind of adorable, it’s also a little worrying how easily you get fevers.”
“You know, I never used to get fevers before I met you.”
“…Correlation doesn’t imply causation?”
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Or, five times Kenma got a fever and the one time Kuroo did.Series
- Part 3 of KuroKen Week 2020
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Summary
Kenma reluctantly spoons vanilla into his mouth, watching the sun set. And when everything is dusted in stripes of pale orange and purple and gold, he glances at Kuroo’s profile muddled in the shadows of the descending sun, and wonders whether he had somehow accidentally made friends with an impressive sort of boy. The ice-cream melted under his thumb feels maddeningly sticky, like he’ll never wash it away thoroughly enough and it would leave its mark wherever he touched before he could.
Kenma has never really thought of anyone as good-looking before, never really cared enough about these things to notice them. But Kuroo is objectively so, in this light, in this angle—maybe all the time.
(A Kuroo and Kenma life story, told in five acts).