All Too Proper || host-kyoya

host-kyoya:

image

Kyoya rode in the company car without speaking a word to his father or siblings. Though he yearned to risk a glimpse out the window and lose himself in the fleeting images of the flourishing landscape, his gaze remained trained to the beige, carpeted flooring so as to observe the conversation buzzing throughout the vehicle without distraction. As it stood, he did hear the unimportant words flitting from each mouth, but he did not listen. Their chat, from what he understood, focused on family matters — primarily, the potential engagement of his second eldest brother at the event hosted by the Hakuba family, the very event to which they traveled now. Yes, the Ootori’s attended to gain new business partners and assure their high social standing, of course, but their true purpose lay in finding a proper wife for Akito.

The idle chat continued for the remainder of the travel, and he held silent until the end. Honestly, Kyoya believed he did not belong at such an event, and his notions were only proved correct upon their arrival. Older men and women wandered around the soiree talking excitedly with one another as if they had not been in company for years, which was very unlikely. Out of the crowd, few individual faces appeared familiar — a tailor here, a manufacturer of medical supplies there. The other Ootori’s could have handled the event on their own easily, and Kyoya could have bode his time at home working figures for the Host Club. Oh, well. 

With a gentle tug on the hem of his suit’s jacket, the brunet separated from his family and wound his way through the crowd drifting about the building’s foyer, greeting strangers with kind smiles and short complimentary phrases. He spent a surprisingly large amount of time shifting in and out of the group; it seemed despite his knowledge of their identities, a majority of the guests knew of the Ootori family, and each wished to babble to him about how wonderful his father’s last advancement turned out or how mature he looked for his age. Kyoya accepted every conversation sent in his direction, as was appropriate, but that meant little to whether he enjoyed speaking with them. Once reaching the brink of the gathering, a weight seemed to lift off his chest, now allowing him to breathe clear, uncrowded air.

Where to now? The teen glanced about, weighing his options. The next room over seemed…well, not as packed as the one he exited from moments before. And so, he marched onward, entering what he expected to be the ballroom. Besides the size of the party, the only difference between this area and the last were the waiters which floated from visitor to visitor. Ah, excellent. Kyoya retrieved a small glass of champagne — the only drink available — from one of the workers, granting a smile of thanks before traveling to the edge of the accommodation to simply observe and relax. Releasing a deep breath from his nose, he sipped at the bubbly drink. As he moved to remove the chalice from his lips, a bump against his back caused the liquid to spill, thus staining his suit. A quiet groan escaped his lips as he observed the spot quickly absorbing his refreshment. The perpetrator only continued on, paying no mind to the mess made; Kyoya assumed it a drunkard’s doing. His outward appearance remained calm despite the lit fuse within him. “What a predicament,” He uttered, more to himself than anyone around him. Alert grey orbs searched the expanse for a waiter, or simply help, who could retrieve a change of clothing or a cloth for him to clean off with.

A predicament, yes, but not one without solution.

The young detective had witnessed the occurrence as he’d watched that particular guest with disguised disdain. What man of any sort of standing made a spectacle of himself like that? Any good man knew their limit and this one was verging far too over the edge for his liking. Hakuba took note, and had stepped in to take care of the issue.

The guest was one Ootori Kyoya; he’d seen him before in passing, but had never had the pleasure of having an actual conversation with him. A shame, really; he was the right age, certainly handsome, and his reputation and success spoke volumes. True, not the oldest son, nor the second oldest, but brilliant in his own right. Not thrilled with the idea of Nepotism to start, the half-British Hakuba didn’t pay it much mind further than keeping that detail in mind to discuss with the natives, anyway. 

“Ah- I’m terribly sorry, Ootori-san. That shouldn’t have happened.” Hakuba’s expression was one of cautious empathy; he knew well how a stain could ruin more than an evening, but didn’t want to appear pitying. He pulled a clean, white handkerchief from his suit jacket and offered it to the other boy, stepping to the appropriate distance to engage in conversation. “That’s rather unfortunate, isn’t it?”

He surveyed the stain with a critical gaze, allowing a small bite to his lip, concerned. “Would you like to accompany me to the staff room? I know they keep club soda on hand for just this sort of thing.”

kurobakaitokid:

image

“Yes, show me…” Kaito murmured softly, grinning at the colour that rose into the detective’s face. Feeling an arm curl around his shoulders and fingers sift through his sensitive hair, Kaito’s smile widened as he was dragged down for a lip-lock.

Hakuba, you little tease…

Smirking against his lips, Kaito’s eyes slid shut in soft enjoyment of the passionate, controlled kiss that was so… Hakuba. A kiss that was all about finesse… deliberate and controlling. Breaking away for a breath, he looked down at the detective, flush from the kiss. He licked his lips as he stared, winking playfully as he tried to recover his breath. Magic was no longer needed to fuel his own desires… which were more than sufficient to keep him in a state of excitement and wanting more…

Flashing Hakuba a devious smile as the only warning, he leaned in to skim his lips teasingly against the detective’s before fully taking his mouth again. His hands wandered and fisted in the detective’s shirt unconsciously, pulling him closer as he deepened the kiss. Hungry for more, he licked across the detective’s bottom lip, coaxing him to open for a taste…

It was all right, wasn’t it? To be there alone in his bedroom with his classmate and quarry. To kiss and be kissed by the one that he liked more than anyone else. At least, Hakuba thought that’s how he felt. Having not really had that much interaction with the boy-slash-thief outside of heists and school, he didn’t quite know what to think, exactly. Except that he admired him. 

Admired him and wanted to be closer. 

Hakuba responded to the touch as directed, lips parting to deepen the kiss, to let Kaito do as he pleased. He couldn’t ignore the pull of his dress shirt, that heated breath, or the scent of him. He couldn’t and he didn’t want to.

He pulled at him, the fingers in his hair curling, combing through; his other hand moving from shoulder blades down his back, then to his side, searching, testing. Just how far was Kuroba-san intend to take this? He wanted to ask, but his mouth was busy. So instead he moved his hand from Kaito’s side further down, onto his hip, eyes open to gauge for reaction, gathering clues for this mystery.

Roses

Such was the situation with a case so cut-and-dry. As Hakuba had only been there as an assisting detective and not fully in command, he had been reigned in and manhandled by the officer he was assigned to. That meant no asking personal questions of the culprit, of reassuring them, finding some way – any way – to assist them. No, once the case had been solved and the handcuffs put on, said murderer was dragged to the police car and that was that. At least for now. There was time, yet, before the trial, and he was certain that his services would be called for again for interrogation. But that was for the next morning. 

The problem for the evening was finding something to distract himself until it was time for scotch and, eventually, an attempt to sleep. Case files, perhaps? He had plenty to work with. 

Hakuba stepped into his bedroom and locked the door behind him as was customary when he was working (thusly, the bedroom was locked nearly all of the time), and flicked on the light switch. Then, it was to the corner fireplace where he checked on the large, wooden clock on the mantle, comparing the time with that of his pocket watch. The glass cover was pulled, swinging open to give access to those ever so delicate metal hands which he adjusted with care. Cover replaced, the detective offered it a familiar smile and nod before heading toward his desk…

…to find the roses.

Three, to be more specific.

“Been and gone already…" Hakuba touched the stem of each one, then the petals, pads of his fingers brushing over silky velvet tenderly. He set his briefcase aside, took up the flowers,  and enjoyed their fragrance as he stepped to the nightstand next to the bed, where a vase containing the other roses was stationed.  After taking a seat on the edge, he used his free hand to open the drawer, pulling out a pair of scissors which he used to cut each stem at an angle, collecting the pieces of discarded stem in his palm. Newly clipped roses joined the others and Hakuba returned to his desk. Stem pieces went in the rubbish bin underneath, scissors were wiped clean with one of the handkerchiefs from the detective’s pocket. They were then returned to the drawer. 

It was back to his briefcase and work desk then, bringing the case with him. He set it up on the side, where it would catch the most light from the lamp ,and smiled as he set to work, removing file folders and pages of stapled documents, preparing himself to begin another long evening of extensive reading.

Then he sighed, and cast a glance to the window. It had always struck him how much it looked like Wendy Darling’s. Actually, he had been certain that it was designed with that , specifically, in mind, mirroring his bedroom back in London. The same panes of glass set in wooden frame over a large window seat, catching the moonlight just right to spill over the area rug. And occasionally, he even had a visitor that was not entirely unlike that fictional Peter Pan. 

He stood and moved to the window, unlocking it with practiced hands, and peered out into the darkened, evening garden. Another sigh.

"One of these nights,” Hakuba said absently, hands running along the sill of the screenless window. “I’ll actually finish your riddle. It’s not so easy for me to write, you know; I’m not so much a writer as I am a reader… butI am working on it.” Then he chuckled. “Of course, with every rose and gift I have to up the ante and… well, this is going to end up a novel at this point. Or at the very least, a sonnet." 

He sat down with a huff on the window seat, pulling a knee up to his chest, arms wrapping around that leg to get comfortable as he watched the moon rising. 

…the mysterious figure didn’t actually hope to escape, did it?

DATE-O START! || akaikujixyaku

akaikujixyaku:

He had a very nice laugh- and hey! At least she was making him laugh.. right? Oh goodness it was hard to know what to do with herself in such an uncustomary atmosphere. (Nobody ever mentioned how hard dates were why). The tilted grin that settled on his features ran a flock of butterflies up her spine, her anxiousness slipping away for at least the moment.

“And I’m quite pleased, as well as impressed, that you were able to divine— no, deduce— My interest, Hakuba-sama. Reading the preferences of people is no small feat, least of all, I think, individuals like myself." She wasn’t quiet, persay, but she did little about making herself  available in conversations, doing her best to divert all attention away from the lady behind the steno-notepad.

His next question earned the slight lull of her head to one side, in curious contemplation over the inquiry, but with a smile remaining set on her soft, partially agape lips (just giving a peek at well-kept, painstakingly-braces-straightened teeth).

image

"My favorite phase.. I think I’d have to go with the new moon, if I think about it, though it’s just barely inching out a waning crescent.”

“Ah! Perfect,” Hakuba said, once again laughing – soft, only a step above a chuckle. “More validation for myself, I must confess. Somehow I knew that you would have an answer. I’ve compiled a list of some of the most unique questions that I could think of, and I’m intent on stumping you. I do hope that you disappoint me by not disappointing me…”

Into the city, Hakuba paid far more attention to the road. Not that he’d been neglectful on the highway, but there were far more hazards on common roads than there were in one-direction traffic flumes. 

“And as for the museum, I’ll confess something there, as well… We’ve always gotten along so well together, you and I, that I imagined that you might share very common interests. With your bright wit, it seemed clear to me that such a museum would not be amiss. It was an educated guess… and I am nonetheless so very pleased to have been correct.”

The detective didn’t usually talk this much all at once, even in interviews. Really, the only time he did was when soap boxing, and even that was reserved for ‘privileged’ audiences. The tactic of paying attention to Himura-kun and not himself had, thus far, paid off in droves.

“Regardless!” Hakuba went on, chancing a sideways glance at his date with that same smile. “The next question is this: Which character from the Wizard of Oz do you most relate to or identify with?”

Then, after a brief pause, “…assuming you’ve seen the film or read the books, anyway.”