Виктор Никифоров (
fivetimechamp) wrote2017-03-05 04:45 pm
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Let's get hotpot! 6 November, 2014 - Shanghai, China
Probably he should be more bothered by what Yakov said –
– but it's difficult to worry too much about a cranky old Russian coach when he's in Shanghai, and it's competition season, and Yuri has two of the best programs he's ever choreographed up his sleeve to wow the judges with. He has no interest in discussing with Yakov whether or not he plans to return to competitive skating, or if he ever wants to come back to St. Petersburg, or his own skills as a coach.
(All right. That last is a bit of a lie: Yakov is the best coach he knows, and there have been more times than he'd anticipated when he'd wished he could ask the old man's advice.
But he's not pretending. He never was, and he isn't now.)
And, anyway, his focus is on Yuri.
As it should be, as a coach. Over the last eight months, he's gotten attuned to the shifts of Yuri's moods, his nervous tics, the tells when he's feeling stressed or uncertain, and right now, Yuri is distracted. He's been lost in thought since their arrival interview, and quiet during their walk through the Shanghai streets, although not uncharacterisically so.
Sometimes Yuri speaks loudest when he uses no words at all. It's another thing Victor's learned about him, noted, kept in the back of his mind for afternoons like this. Yuri gets nervous near competition, and there's already mounting pressure to succeed after the failure of the last season. There's a nervous energy Victor can feel humming under the arm he's got slung around Yuri's shoulders, distraction in the short, one-word or belated answers to Victor's comments. He's not even sure Yuri notices when Victor's steered them into a hot pot place (almost universally agreed upon as the best one by the fans he'd asked for recommendations on social media), or when they're seated in a private booth, or when Victor orders.
It's all right, Victor decides, smiling gently across the table at him. Yuri's been able to overcome his nerves on the ice, and they both have absolute faith in the programs they've built together, practiced together, perfected together. Tomorrow, Yuri will seduce the whole of China, and everyone else watching: Victor has every certainty in his ability to win.
He could hardly be more confident if he were skating them himself. "Look, Yuri!"
(But he still needs to find a way to distract Yuri tonight.) "Shanghai crab! Drunken shrimp! Duck blood!"
Everything looks so colorful and delicious, he almost doesn't know where to start: hands up, an expression of pure bliss settling over his face.
"Doesn't it all look great?"
(I feel sick when I see you playing pretend-coach)
– but it's difficult to worry too much about a cranky old Russian coach when he's in Shanghai, and it's competition season, and Yuri has two of the best programs he's ever choreographed up his sleeve to wow the judges with. He has no interest in discussing with Yakov whether or not he plans to return to competitive skating, or if he ever wants to come back to St. Petersburg, or his own skills as a coach.
(All right. That last is a bit of a lie: Yakov is the best coach he knows, and there have been more times than he'd anticipated when he'd wished he could ask the old man's advice.
But he's not pretending. He never was, and he isn't now.)
And, anyway, his focus is on Yuri.
As it should be, as a coach. Over the last eight months, he's gotten attuned to the shifts of Yuri's moods, his nervous tics, the tells when he's feeling stressed or uncertain, and right now, Yuri is distracted. He's been lost in thought since their arrival interview, and quiet during their walk through the Shanghai streets, although not uncharacterisically so.
Sometimes Yuri speaks loudest when he uses no words at all. It's another thing Victor's learned about him, noted, kept in the back of his mind for afternoons like this. Yuri gets nervous near competition, and there's already mounting pressure to succeed after the failure of the last season. There's a nervous energy Victor can feel humming under the arm he's got slung around Yuri's shoulders, distraction in the short, one-word or belated answers to Victor's comments. He's not even sure Yuri notices when Victor's steered them into a hot pot place (almost universally agreed upon as the best one by the fans he'd asked for recommendations on social media), or when they're seated in a private booth, or when Victor orders.
It's all right, Victor decides, smiling gently across the table at him. Yuri's been able to overcome his nerves on the ice, and they both have absolute faith in the programs they've built together, practiced together, perfected together. Tomorrow, Yuri will seduce the whole of China, and everyone else watching: Victor has every certainty in his ability to win.
He could hardly be more confident if he were skating them himself. "Look, Yuri!"
(But he still needs to find a way to distract Yuri tonight.) "Shanghai crab! Drunken shrimp! Duck blood!"
Everything looks so colorful and delicious, he almost doesn't know where to start: hands up, an expression of pure bliss settling over his face.
"Doesn't it all look great?"
no subject
A vicious snakebite of a thought. Fuck up. And more. The worst things he can throw at himself, as he's accepting the shirt Yuri's handing to him, while careful not to make contact with Yuri, himself. To soil oneself. That seems right.
Yuri's saying it's okay, but it isn't. He's. Все испортить. Spoiled everything. Maybe. Probably. Possibly.
Everything they'd moved towards, grown towards, everything he'd coaxed out in eight months. Ruined because he couldn't restrain himself, because he was feeling too good to stop, because he'd had much too much to drink.
Sending the floor tipping out from under him when he stands, even if it looks like Celestino has it worse. Phichit is hauling his coach up with a laugh that's only a little strained, and one of the boys from the end of the table is helping, which is good, probably. Victor can at least walk, he thinks, even if it won't be in a very straight line.
Even if he feels like a kicked dog, and just wants to slink under the table to curl into a ball and try to forget what he just did.
Shoes back on, somehow, and when he looks, Yuri has the jacket Victor had left on the back of that chair, which is good, because Victor forgot it was there. Like he forgot where they were.
(Where are they?)
Trying to parse what Yuri's saying, but it feels like the words are landing somewhere just out of reach, and he has to keep his distance, even if it's wobbly. "Okay."
Nodding along with whatever it is, because he'll jut do whatever Yuri says to do right now, okay. As long as Yuri talks to him. Is still here.
And even now, he doesn't know how to not be swamped by it: this need to reach out, and just be closer. How he feels when he sees that face. The faces he'd wanted to see, and not the one he got. That he still remembers, crystal clear, even when everything else is a haze. He remembers. He didn't forget. Yuri told him not to and he didn't, he didn't.
But Yuri's moving, and watching Victor like Victor's supposed to be doing something, too, so Victor follows, bumping his hip into the table and steadying himself, for a second, on the wall, until he's free from the booth, and Phichit, with Celestino's arm thrown over his shoulder, and the other over the shoulder of the taller boy that Victor doesn't know, is smiling at them like this was the best night he's ever had.
So Victor smiles back, and waves, even if it's a little loose and a little pale, before – where's Yuri? Is he still here?
Looking around, until he catches sight of him, and relaxing, even when he shouldn't.
It's okay. It's not okay. But he'll make it better. He has to.
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He doesn't get any shorter, nor does his coloring stand out any less than it always does -- always will. But he looks ... smaller. In a way that Yuri can't make fit into that word or another word, even when he's racking his brain for it. While Victor puts on his shirt and shoes, and the boys are helping Phichit with Celestino.
Yuri wants to be a little annoyed when Victor smiles and waves at the others leaving, like he's the star somehow still and he's saying goodbye to his people, but it's like a landing that just won't stick. It tumbles over itself, on edges that are melting beneath his grasp, because Victor can't even seem to manage to be upright for longer than two steps without bumping into something.
A chair. The table. Things on the table rattling. Reaching out for the wall to steady him before he's looking suddenly for something -- and only stops, only looks less suddenly worried, when he stops on Yuri's face. When Yuri doesn't know what to make of that, not while, also, coming to the realization, obvious though it might have been before this second to the rest of the world, that there are limited walls for support between here and the hotel.
Victor might be able to stand better than Celestino, but his ability to walk is only just barely above. With help.
Help he won't have as soon as they step outside of the building, and ... Yuri's not really even that mean, is he?
Even if mean is the wrong word, too. (And scared is, too, even when he feels like every single nerve in his body is at the highest alert its been in months.) The wrong feeling, the wrong feeling, none of them the right words, the right feelings, nameable, labelable, when he's walking back closer. There's a tension in his stomach about that, but it's on the same line as the one that was forming just standing over there instead.
It's different, but it strikes the same cord.
His voice low, when he shifting Victor's jacket in his hands. So that the right arm hole on this side is ready for him to just reach out and slip an arm into, just on this side. So he doesn't have to figure out anything for himself. "You're going to need this." It's Shanghai in winter, out there. The two who came never even took off their coats.
Even if it's not the same thing he's thinking when he says it;
He's going to need Yuri,
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"You're going to need this."
From behind him, and to one side. Making Victor look at the thing he's holding – the jacket, open and ready – before glancing back up at the face above it, while everything to the side swims. The spotlight on Yuri. Where it always is.
So maybe Yuri's not afraid of him. Maybe Yuri isn't going to recoil from him every time.
Maybe, maybe. While he slips his arm into the jacket, and then the other, and Yuri is helping him shrug it on, before Victor turns to face him, and say, he doesn't know. Something. Anything. Apologize again. Say he'd never purposely do anything to hurt or scare Yuri, because Yuri is the only thing he's ever wanted that wasn't at the top of a podium, or behind the flash of cameras, or the sound of his blades on ice.
Leaving him staring down, wordless, and reaching before he even knows it. Towards Yuri's cheek, fingers careful and wary, like Yuri might bolt at any second, a rabbit sprinting for its hole. Wanting to run his thumb along the line of his jaw. Some sort of promise, or apology, or comfort.
(But he can't risk it. Even if he's not leaning in. Even if it's just a touch, the kind they've shared dozens, hundreds of times, once Yuri grew more comfortable with him.
It's for him. It shouldn't be. It has to be for Yuri.)
His fingers curl back before they touch skin, and he pulls his hand away, feeling chagrined and stupid and like the floor might buck him off any second. "Are we going?"
Except that's not quite right. It's not what he wants to ask, what he needs to know.
Like that question. The one Yuri never answered.
Except not that one, either. He gave up that right. The one where Yuri should come with him. Or would want to.
He tries again, searching. Maybe a little more wistful than he has any right to be right now. "Can I come with you?"
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When his hands don't stay and don't shake, and Victor's turning to face him. His hands left in the air, with no purchase and no purpose, even when they hadn't been solid a second ago. Like his bravery, if it was even bravery to take three steps and help someone, without the ability to help themselves, put a jacket on in freezing weather is bravery, is gone.
Because Victor is staring down at him like. Like. He doesn't know words for this. Not in any language there. It's an unfocused and turbulent blue-green, familiar and lost all at once, and before he can even think to swallow, Victor is reaching out to him, again. To his face. And he freezes. Without that breath, but without running away or pulling away. His eyes shifting between the hand almost touching his cheek and the face above him.
Except Victor seems to be looking at his fingers, too. And everything is frozen like that.
Yuri's heart thudding in his heart. Ears. Uncertain. Painful. Trying to hold still. Maybe with a tremor. His eyes staying on Victor's face, even when Victor is and isn't looking at him back. Is looking at, Yuri doesn't even know what. In his face. Or on his own hand. Everything is just stuck. Frozen. Time counting seconds only in his labored heartbeats.
Too much. Too little. Almost something that would have been normal. Maybe felt real.
But then Victor drops his hand and everything in Yuri's heart goes right down with it.
It shouldn't be possible to feel this much, so quickly, without having taken a drink.
He isn't done, though. Victor. Victor who goes about asking one question, and then another. Basically, the same question for all intents and purposes and Yuri has to reach up to rub at his glasses, the way he's pretending he doesn't want to push them into his hair and scrub hard at his eyes. Not here. Not after everything else that's already happened here.
He pushed them back up on his nose and makes himself breathe in -- out -- take in this wistful, hopeful, sad expression above him and put out something the feels far more certain than he does about anything other than the fact two seconds ago his lungs proved they do still, in fact, work.
"I can't let you go anywhere else." It tries for something casual, but Yuri isn't sure it works.
Isn't sure he's truly, honestly, known what casual was a day in his life.
(But maybe he'd thought he was getting there. Before.)
Still, he makes his shoulders settle, like he does before starting, even if there isn't any music, willing himself to be more, be better, because Victor needs him still, and he slides an arm through Victor's closest arm, and takes a step toward the exit the others had gone toward, tugging him that way. "We should get you water, too."
no subject
(He might have thought he knew before, but that was before. Before five minutes ago. Before it turned out he couldn't read Yuri as well as he thought.)
It doesn't go away when he drops his hand, and he's not sure if that was the right thing to do, or not. He's all turned around, and he had way too much to drink: it's all hitting him now, like a freight train. He'd felt so good before, but now he just feels woozy and tired, and like he wants his bed.
(And.
To stay.)
But Yuri isn't pulling away, at least, and better, he isn't going anywhere. Which shouldn't be relieving, but it is, even when sounds more like you can't be trusted by yourself, and that's probably true. He's not sure what would happen, if he were left to his own devices tonight: call Chris, maybe. Gp to another bar and drink until he's insensible. But that would be selfish, too, wouldn't it? Yuri's first program is tomorrow.
And Yuri's arm is slipping into his, anyway, and Victor looks down at his dark head with the beginnings of a surprised and hopeful smile. "Okay."
Walking where Yuri directs him, as if Yuri hasn't dictated everywhere he's gone and everything he's done for almost two years. "I don't need water."
Testing the waters, to see if things are really okay, and. Alright. It's true, too. Trusting and simple. "I just need you."
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Because he did. And it is. And Victor ... is smiling down at him now.
Flighty hope and starting light, where that space had been empty.
Which makes Yuri's gaze go back down the next second. Because that's what it is. What all of this is. Even if Yuri almost wants to roll his eyes at it, and the familiarity of it. Almost near to a hundred other things he'd say, somewhere that isn't here, isn't part of all of this, so close it makes the hairs on the back of his neck itch a little.
He's -- he doesn't know. Why it matters now. Why it hits harder at this second. That normal, every day, in and out, mischievous, teasing intensity of Victor's that keeps him on his toes, keeps him chasing the wind, every spin, every jump, every start, every ending, every second in-between. (But ... he does. ... doesn't he. It's too close. Everything is still so close. Victor is; and he can't let go of him.) Maybe it's what puts the extra of touch of willfulness in his voice, and makes his steps out of this place just a little faster.
"You're still going to drink the water."
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And he is. Has been. Is rebellious towards Victor's orders and ignores Victor's suggestions and defines Victor's days, weeks, months. "You don't get to order me around. I'm the coach, not you."
Even if his arm tightens, and his free hand comes across his own body find Yuri's forearm, as if to keep him there. Here. Next to him. Walking with him, even if it's a little faster than Victor, or Victor's head, would like. Even if Victor's feet, trained through decades on the ice, manage to keep up just fine.
The hostess waves as they head to the door, and Victor nods to her, but doesn't let go of Yuri. (He's got no idea what might happen if he did, how fast Yuri might disappear, how much more difficult to walk to their hotel, even if it's close by.
Is it? He can't remember.)
Outside, the air bites, but he barely feels it: even after a summer in Hasetsu, he's still used to the cold. Loves it. The way it pricks at his cheeks with an icy kiss, how it cools his flushed face and forehead.
Making him take a deep breath, that doesn't help with the spinning world around him, even if having Yuri's arm through his does.
Helps. He's forgiven enough to be able to touch him, at least: that's a good sign.
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That Victor is drunk, and Victor will need water.
He's seen it, often as Yu-topia. With Minako, his father, others.
He's had at least one day of history with it, too. Not that it was anything like this or those.
And instead it's petulance that's tossed at him, and something just shoots outward from inside of him. He can feel the words about to come out of his throat, about how he won't be if he's still drunk come morning, and it. He only means it one of the those two ways and not the other, but it never makes it out of his mouth, because Victor shifts again.
Right on the heels of his complaint to suddenly gripping Yuri's forearm with his other hand. Like he'd decided Yuri might suddenly push him off or away, or step away, or something? Just because of his words? And that just bricks everything back. Thorns and stones in his throat, taking away his voice. And what would be the point? If Victor is drunk and Victor can't keep anything straight from one sentence to the next.
If this was where this all went, why didn't he just have one drink?
No. No, he knows why he's here.
Tomorrow is bigger than all of this. )
Yuri's shoulders dip a little back, and he slows back down. He doesn't pay attention to the hostess, or the nice man who had helped them, or even the front door as they leave, but he stops for a second when they do step outside. When everything shifts from warmth and low warm yellow light to the breath of ice and the nightlights of Shanghai.
When the first thing he's found to say again is so completely innocuous, but he can't help wanting to say something and not being able to stop himself anymore, not knowing how long ago he stopped stopping himself, stopped needing a reason to justify it most of the time, "See. You needed your jacket."
And the rest of his clothes, and shoes. And the water. Yuri would just have to think for both of them, and try not to fall off the flat of the earth every two seconds when everything Victor said or did came from every angle he wasn't expecting it to. He looked up, a little beleaguered by the idea, but bolstered by the cool air finally taking fingertips and brushing away the lingering heat from the tops of his cheeks and neck.
"You can go back to being in charge once you're in the hotel room."
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(He can't remember.)
Scoffed: "Since when does cold bother Russians?"
(Sounding more like Yurio than he might know.)
It doesn't. Bother him. After the warmth inside the restaurant, it feels nice, even, and he's about to suggest that maybe he and Yuri walk around for a little bit, until Victor's head has stopped spinning and his feet have stopped floating and his stomach has agreed to settle back into its usual spot, when he says that.
And. Victor can't help but look down at him, blinking a drunken fog out of his eyes. Did he hear that right? Because it sounded like...
Like last winter. The winter before, even. The banquet. The Katsuki Yuri who took no prisoners and held his ground and implied everything, even if he never showed up.
(Even though Victor waited. Longer than he should have. Longer than anyone smarter than him would have. Waiting there in Sochi, until it became abundantly clear that Yuri wasn't going to show up at his door and make good on his promises.)
Unable to keep any of his thoughts from flooding across his face, he's sure, because he can barely feel his face, and Yuri just. That. He said that. And Victor knows that's not what he meant, but he can't help it, picturing it. Listening for the sound of Yuri's back hitting the door. Pushing, directing Yuri the way Yuri is pushing and directing him.
Not what Yuri meant. But it kicks the cover off the raw and pulsing want that has had nearly two years to expand and take on a life of its own, and he can feel it as a distant warmth in his cheeks. The way he did in those first few days at Yu-topia, when he couldn't take his eyes off Yuri.
Like now, except they're walking, and not looking where he's going is only going to make him stumble, no matter how many years he's trained to be light on his feet.
Annoyed with himself, when he catches his balance, because he knows better. Or did, before tonight.
And, yes. Maybe a little annoyed with Yuri, too. With the wait. With the hours that night, and how foolish he felt the next day.
With the whole year after, when he couldn't ever get it off his mind or out of his program. "Don't make promises you aren't willing to keep."
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Just three or four seconds ago, before he was having to try and help Victor stay on his feet, which Victor scoffed at even the lightest thing he could think to say, scoffed at his needing to say something, inability to not try and help, as though he couldn't need help, and certainly not Yuri's help, and then started, and went about muttering a retort under his breath, like Yuri had been the one to insult the pride and honor he had for himself, or his country, or who knows what.
His having skills. Or a hoard of gold medals.
Or any fully present inability to keep anything straight. Which was, of course, Yuri's fault.
At least it's all in English this time? He doesn't even know it that's a plus or a minus. Like maybe Victor wants him to be able to hear it this time when he contradicts Yuri once again. There's something a little sterner as well as a little more than just stung in his tone, when he stops walking to ask, as obvious for being heard as it is having heard, "Do I need to make it a promise?"
"Do you need to be able to make me run the stairs or do a hundred sit-ups?"
Or -- but Yuri can't bring his throat or his mouth to form the rest bubbling up his head.
Even just to promise he can and that if Victor commands it there, he'll stop talking altogether and just leave him alone. Stop trying to help. Would it matter? Should it matter? If he can just say anything that would get Victor to agree to just walk a little further, drink some water, go to the hotel. Because he'd do it. The wind is blowing the ends of his hair, chill air starting to steal the edges of his ears, the tip of his nose, and he knows, he knows more than he should, that he would.
If it would help, somehow, someway, anywhere, even Victor's pride, but especially Victor's state, he'd do it.
He'd run the length of every floor on the building, before even considering going to sleep.
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Run stairs? Do sit-ups? That isn't what he meant. None of it is what he meant, or wants.
Or, it is. To know that he'll be listened to, as a coach, of course. But he's almost sure they weren't talking about that, not really. Yuri had mentioned the room, and that had made him think of the last time he was in a hotel room, waiting for Katsuki Yuri, feeling stricken to the core. "No."
No, he didn't want that promise. No, he doesn't want Yuri running stairs, or halls, or streets. He wants Yuri here, with him. Of course he does. Obviously he does.
Reaching forward again, and this time his fingers do brush Yuri's cheek, before Victor's folding into him in a hug, arms around Yuri's neck, the way a child might hug a stuff animal.
It shouldn't be so hard, to say just don't leave. Muttering instead: "Of course you shouldn't be training that hard the day before a competition."
Reluctant to let go, reluctant to say more. What is there to say? That just having Yuri there is what he needs and wants. That he doesn't know what to do, or say, because Yuri is the only one he's ever loved this way. That he's perfectly satisfied, just with this. To have him there.
But Yuri's face is looking worried, or uncertain, and he likes that almost as little as he'd like the horror at the table, so he should find other words. In English. Make sure he understands. Victor can explain, he can, if he has the chance.
"Just come back with me."
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Because. Because. Because even if he offers to give Victor what he wants it's not right.
He's doing everything wrong, just trying to get this part right, trying to help, to take care of Victor, and he's not expecting it, eyes not quite on the ground, but closer to Victor's knees than anything higher. Which gives him less than part of the second to realize that Victor's hand is in his visions, only right before there are fingers against his cheek, so soft and just this side of cold, making something in his chest crack.
But it doesn't end there, because Victor swoops in, like earlier, while he stands there. Something, disastrously, like anything, anything at all skittering, desperately needing in a completely different new way, across his brain before he realizes it's not. Before he realizes Victor's arms are around his neck, and Victor's head is nestled next to his, part on his shoulder, part against his head, his neck.
And ... holding him tighter than earlier. Not letting go.
When Yuri can't even think but his hands don't need him for that.
Because they are around Victor's back an instant later and he's pushing his faces into Victor's opposite shoulder, hard, eyes closing, eyes clouding up, not caring if his glasses dig into his face. Something impossible hiccuping in his chest on top of that crack. While Victor says the first thing of all of the last minute or two that even seems to make a bit of sense. That sounds like him. Ending with those few words, while Yuri nods his head into Victor's shoulder.
Of the anything he could give, of all that he would, that one is so small, and Victor already has it.
Leaving him nodding, just nodding, again, saying, "Okay," soft, tacit, like it isn't everything he's wanted the whole time.
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Even better, he folds into this embrace, face into Victor's shoulder, voice muffled against Victor's jacket, arms around him. Saying okay like there was never a reason to even ask. Like it's so obvious, the only possible answer.
And maybe it is. All their stuff is in that room. Yuri's skates and his costumes, his earbuds and MP3 player, their passes. There wasn't really any other option, or anywhere else too go. Except that sort of thinking is too logical for Victor's rice wine-soaked brain, that's feeling less and less coherent with every passing moment, as more and more alcohol absorbs into his system.
Which is probably why he says, low and certain: "I only want you."
Mumbled into Yuri's shoulder, his hair. Just about at his ear. Meaning everything, and nothing like everything, all at once, because he's not sure how to put this feeling into words Yuri will understand. He'd though Yuri understood it, before, when he copied Stay Close to Me, but maybe not: and his drink-addled brain is having difficulty finding the English for what he wants to say, what Yuri should understand.
That he probably shouldn't be saying out here on the street, anyway, but is, because he's not sure he can stop. Trying to explain himself. Trying to express himself.
Distracted, over and over again, by Yuri soft and warm against his chest, in his arms, under his chin and mouth, nestled into his shoulder. "And you didn't, before."
Didn't come back with him. Didn't show up. Didn't, didn't. Maybe he's breaking their unspoken taboo on this, but it's like Yuri's turned him upside down and is shaking the words out like change. Yuri hasn't brought it up, so he hasn't, either, but he hasn't just forgotten. Yuri told him not to, and he didn't.
Even if he tried to ignore it, until tonight, when it all came bubbling out again, like shaken champagne.
Huffing a sigh into Yuri's shoulder, wanting to just go limp here, on top of him, instead of walking all the way back to the hotel. it's cold, but he doesn't feel it.
All he feels is Yuri. It's all he needs.
no subject
It's something Victor already has. It wasn't as though Yuri was going to go somewhere else, as if Yuri would have even come out tonight if it wasn't for that arm slung over his shoulder and the cheerful voice in his ear claiming a need for the best hotpot reviews could sell. It's not like he was ever going anywhere but back to the same hotel room with Victor.
Who adds four more words to the first four and makes Yuri's forehead wrinkle, because it doesn't make as much sense. He didn't want --Yuri blinked against the coat under his cheek, his mouth, not wanting to move, but not wanting to get more of it wrong. He didn't what, what was Victor trying to say?
Didn't want himself before? (That wasn't a lie, but ... he didn't think so. ) Didn't want Victor before ? (That was a lie, but not one he could have meant. Or say.) Did he mean 'before,' back at the hotpot place when... (...but no, Victor apologized. Twice.) Or did he mean -- did he mean it as simply, as those same words five minutes ago?
The ones Yuri just passed up as teasing, when it was need instead of want, in opposition to his demand about the water, when maybe that was heartless, not saying anything, because nothing was making sense in Victor's head after drinking all of the miju, and somehow it had mattered? That that was why he suddenly got snappy?
Somehow he thought Yuri just wanted to take him back and leave him there? Alone?
Maybe he's trying too hard to make sense of it even now?
When all Victor wants is for him to be there now?
Especially, when Victor just huffs a sigh that gets half in his jacket, and the other half of it ruffles his hair, warming the side of his neck and part of his ear, just for a second, while Victor just lays into him. When Yuri says the only thing he can think to say at all, like it just needs to be said. "I'm staying."
It's so obvious to him, but if nothing is to Victor. He say it, too. "I'm not going anywhere."
But they are. They need to, and Yuri can do better. Better than the last five minutes. Better than he's ever needed to. For Victor, he always can. He finds a way. Find it inside himself, makes it something of himself, so he takes a breath in and pulls back. Not far, a few inches, to be able to look up at Victor, and then not entirely at all.
He says, softer, "We're not far now," nicer than earlier, even when they haven't left sight of the restaurant, and he can do better, stop stumbling over not understanding, not being ready, just plain not knowing what to do or how to deal, or feeling stupid ... for earlier, if Victor needs him, wants him now.
He lets of one of his hands drop from Victor's back, but he just slides the other further. Just slips himself under one of Victor's arms, under his shoulder (the way they'd already been carrying out Celestino ; the way Victor latched on to him half of the time even sobber) and tried to give him something of a smile.
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That he dropped everything for. His career. His new programs. His legacy. The legacy he's been carrying for years, now, that Yakov will never let him forget, because Viktor Nikiforov isn't just one person or one skater, but the product of generations.
(He knows. That it's not his coaching that Yakov hates, but the betrayal. The abandonment. He was always supposed to belong to Russia more than to himself.)
Leaving him nodding, as Yuri's arm slides around his back, and his own curls around Yuri's neck, and he leans a little to settle his cheek against Yuri's hair, hip bumping into Yuri's side. "Okay." Back to the hotel. Where Yuri won't leave, because he just promised he'll stay, and Victor is going to make sure he makes good on that promise, this time.
Even as he's affectionately tugging Yuri closer to his side, and relaxing, trying to wrangle his brain into thinking ahead, instead of sticking itself in a past he can't help, right now. (It's difficult: he keeps getting distracted, has to pause to remember to use English instead of Russian.) "Good. I'm tired, and you need sleep."
It's not even that late, but it feels like it: bone-tired, heavy-eyed, every muscle loose and warm. The wine is spinning in his head and simmering in his blood and he's pretty sure there was something important he had to say or do, but he can't remember what it was: latches onto an errant thought about what Yuri needs from his coach, and sleep is certainly part of it. He'd always slept late before competitions, it's a lot of energy to expend.
That's not how Yuri works, usually, but it's fine. They just need to get back.
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Almost confused, contradictory, just for a second, lost, deceived, before it softens back under while he stares at Yuri, gaze shifting until it can center on Yuri's own, and when Yuri moves he just forms to Yuri the way he always does. They way he throws his arms around Yuri's shoulder and leans him almost a third over in his exuberance after his first two performances, when they were somewhere in Hasetsu and Victor just couldn't contain his joy at needing to share something, like Yuuri hadn't lived in the country most of his life.
Victor who tugs him closer, until their legs are bumping gently as they shift, and Victor's cheek and chin finds its way against his hair, making him some combination of crutch and teddy bear. Victor's less in control of the directing, but it's still absolutely familiar. Like pulling his jacket around his shoulders.
Grounding. Feels like it steadies everything in his chest, even though it was meant to steady Victor.
He lets his fingers dig softly into Victor's jacket on the other side and he looks up, again, but out, instead, this time.
Taking his bearings on where they are, and remembering how they got here after the interviews, how they got to the interviews after dropping everything off in the hotel. Considering what the shortest paths are, even if it'll still be a dawdling walk at best, and starting them back off in that direction again.
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It feels like years, instead of only hours ago, and he's not sure how he managed to forget it until just now, reminded in a moment of clarity.
(And instantly forgetting again, when Yuri shifts under his arm and Victor looks around, too.)
Shanghai. He likes it here. Has been here before, even if he can't recall, at the moment, exactly when, or for what. Some competition, among dozens of competitions. Yakov nagging at him. His time spent between the rink and the hotel and the bars nearby, probably, like usual.
What a lonely existence it seems, now, to look back on. Even with the fans, and the crowds, and the interviews, and the other skaters. It was always just him. He'd never minded being held apart. Wanted it, even. Enjoyed it. Being the best. "Yuri..."
Changing everything. Always staying close, now. Doing exactly what Victor had been asking of him for so long. "Do you like Shanghai?"
He can't remember if he asked before, or not. "Are you excited for tomorrow?"
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When these walks between buildings are the closest he's gotten to seeing much of Shanghai since arriving. The buildings were ... nice? The hot pot was ... an experience? He vaguely remembers the golden columns, and Phichit's face rapture. Phichit'S excited response to that question would be unequivocal. He'd already be in love with the place. Before his plane even set down.
The second question catches him unprepared. Again. As always. It almost trips up his step.
Excited. Excited? Was he --
There's an unhelpful noise at the press of his lips. His reaction to this one is even less one he wants to give words to, but it is at least definitive. The word is not excited, when it catches him, under foot, in these finally calm, smooth few seconds, like stepping out on the ice in his tennis shoes instead of his skates. His return to the Grand Prix, with the China Cup he won. That went well ... for the most part well.
He could not mess up here the way he had there. (Some part of his mind trying, perhaps, not winded enough to help, to remind him he'd made it through his qualifiers the first time, too. He'd done well enough to move through each of them and reach the GPF competition.) He could not mess up here the way he had there either, or at the Nationals after either.
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It's not the debut of Eros, but it is the first time it will really count, and the first time it will be in front of such a large audience, both live and live-streaming. It's ready. They've worked so hard on it: Yuri's thrown his whole self into it in a way Victor could never have expected from imagining a pork cutlet bow, and it's almost perfect.
Almost exactly like what he remembers. Katsuki Yuri, melting the ice, stealing hearts and breaking them: just as Victor asked him to do. Love me and leave me.
Except there is no leaving. There's work on Yuri on Ice, and on landing jumps, and there are miles to run, mountain paths to run up, laps at the beach to swim, ballet classes to take, family dinners, baths, late nights up talking. Yuri going from quiet to shy to comfortable to almost talkative, lying there on his bed or Victor's, talking about whatever came to mind. About the programs. About his childhood. About his fears, and how they manifest.
And everywhere, that underlying beam of determination that never fails to surprise, like biting into a marshmallow and finding steel. "I can't wait for everyone to see you."
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Like it doesn't do dangerous things to Yuri's stomach he can't even describe, because it's hard enough to feel.
This combined, confused thing about a shot of elation (at the fact Victor wants him there, out there, already, everyone watching him do what he's done almost singularly only for Victor, save The Southern Regional Championships, has no doubt in him, somehow) and stab of dread (at the idea of messing up entirely, on Victor, who says he's excited, while everyone is watching him, and Victor, who gave up everything, including all of them, for Yuri, and if he fails then).
He can't say that though, and he can't say nothing again, because then who knows what Victor will feel compelled to say, to possibly keep going like Yuri just hadn't heard him, even though it's been said right next to his head. "It not like you'll have to wait long now."
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Eight months. Two years. He's never waited for anything in his whole life like he's waited for the day when the world sees Katsuki Yuri as he really, truly is. Everything he can be. And the proof of everything Victor's felt and done, woven into the programs he choreographed, the practice and drills he oversaw, the help he offered. Be my coach, Victor.
And that love letter, still gaining hits and views on YouTube, more and more as they get closer and closer to the Grand Prix Final.
(Even if he isn't still sure that's what it was. A love letter, and not just a reminder. Or invitation. Or challenge.)
He tips his head up to the sky, cold air washing at his cheeks to cool the wine-fueled flush there, eyes falling closed, and trusting that Yuri will steer him clear of any obstacles in his path. "I think you're going to surprise everyone."
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He knows he's being stupid. Negative. That it's not going to help him. It doesn't give it any less claws, digging gouges into the ice that makes up the inside of his head. But he still knows it's stupid. Too. Knows he's being just as overdramatic as Victor can be, in his own way. That the pressure is going to be bad enough without his giving in, making it worse, helping it along. He tries to stuff it down.
They've practiced over and over and over again.
He's gotten it right so many times when he just gets out of his own way.
When it's just the music and the ice, it's just throwing himself wholly into every word and every move. When there's nothing but it.
The thing that comes to mind next, in that emptied space, is wanting to say he'd settle just for placing, except something else happens to that thought. Something clunky. Defiant. In his head. In his guts. Because he doesn't want to settle for, to just place. He doesn't want to just survive tomorrow. And the day after. (His life. Skating.) That's not what they've been doing for all these months. Making him just good enough to manage to sneak by, if and when no one is watching.
He wants more than that. Which is just as cloudy in his guts. He wants it. That want pulsing there just as deeply.
Never drowned out by what happened before Victor. Before coming home. Only having dug itself in deeper since then.
It's there, in that space, that silence, that he does. He does. He wants to surprise them all.
The way Victor did every time he stepped on the ice. The way Victor did when he arrived that first day.
The way Victor never stops surprising him in real life, even when he's been here so many days Yuri has lost count.
He wants to surprise them, but even more, so much more it makes everything fragile as falling cherry blossoms and harder than ice?
He wants to surprise Victor. To show Victor. He's listened. He's learned. He can take everything he's been given, every snap and smile and undiscussed sacrifice, and he can make it every bit as perfect as its supposed to be, trained to be, could ever be unless Victor, himself, were out there on the ice skating.
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On the ice. Off it. Inspiring feelings Victor had no idea he was even capable of.
And, tomorrow, he'll show it to the whole world. Make them all fall for him, seduce them, flirt with them, leave them aching for more. If it worked on him, it'll work on anyone. Everyone.
He's not sure how, but things seem to be getting even fuzzier. Or, really, it's more like time is passing in hops: they're walking down a street, and a blink later, they're in front of a storefront. He's not sure how long ago they were at the restaurant: it could have been ten minutes or ten seconds or ten hours.
(He probably shouldn't have had those last few glasses.)
Huffing out a sigh, and trying to focus on keeping the walkway in front of him from splitting into two mirroring images: "Aren't we getting close, yet?"
All he wants to do is lie down and pass out. Or. Well. Maybe that isn't all he wants to do. That would mean letting go of Yuri, and he doesn't want to let go of Yuri. Not when Yuri should know, right. By now? Why Victor tried that, back there. And he's sorry, but he thought, was sure –
He should explain, He tries to put a pin in the thought but it slips away like nailing jelly to a wall, and all that's left again is the sound of their footsteps and the wavering sidewalk in front of them.
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As though this walk had suddenly become untenable to bear.
Victor's not always good at being patient, but this is ... it's almost ... what is the word?
It's faintly warm against the hooks of Yuri's ribs, and there's half an urge to roll his eyes and half an urge to smile.
Something that calls him impossible but is utterly woven through with that warmth, almost shaking his head at the whole of it. That isn't a no by any sense, but the final escape of this ruefully unnamed feeling inside of him, when he raises a hand and points at a tall hotel building shining in the far distance.
"It's right there. You can even see it now." Not exceedingly close, but not all that far.
Not nearly as far as Yuri has gotten used to running nearly everyday.
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A relieved sigh, even though he groans a little to see how far the building still is. It's not close enough, the hotel, the room. Their room. That he's sharing with Yuri, this time, which is both wonderful and torturous, although it has its benefits. "Back to the room. Our room."
Pausing, trying to haul his thoughts back around to where they were hovering only seconds ago. "Celestino won't take you away."
Not this time. Even if this time, Victor is the drunk one, and not Yuri. Yuri should have had something. Victor would like to see that again.
After the Grand Prix Final. After the gold. After they prove to the world that they can both be these things they've declared themselves to be: a champion and a coach.
(Even if he's not sure, right this second, which one of them is which.)
"I don't think he likes me very much."
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