The air in the small restaurant smelled of katsu curry and a shared victory. The neon light from outside bathed their table in a warm, orange glow that made Ochako's smile shine even brighter. She set her chopsticks down on her half-empty plate and leaned forward, a mischievous spark in her eyes.
"You know, I'm still deciding if what you did was the most brilliant or the most shameless act in U.A. history," she said, her voice a conspiratorial whisper. "My dad works in construction, and he's never seen a demolition that efficient. Psychological and, well, almost physical."
Izuku, who was about to bring a piece of breaded pork to his mouth, froze. He blushed violently. "I already told you I was sorry. It was a split-second tactical decision."
"Ah, yes. The 'tactical decision,'" she teased, stirring her rice with the tip of a chopstick. "And did that tactical decision require such a... thorough quality check?"
"It wasn't a quality check! It was an application of the Booster!" he defended himself, his voice a little louder than he intended, causing the couple at the next table to glance over curiously. He lowered his voice. "I had to ensure a stable connection for the energy transfer. It's science."
"Right, 'science.'" Ochako covered her mouth to stifle a giggle. "You're lucky I didn't decide to try my own science and make you float all the way to the sun for that trick, Deku-kun. My 'tactical' hands almost gave you a slap."
"I would have apologized for the entire orbital trip!" he insisted, though he couldn't help but smile. "Seriously, Uraraka, I'm sorry. It won't happen again. Unless it's absolutely necessary for victory, of course. And only if you agree. Beforehand. In writing, if possible."
Ochako's laugh, clear and genuine, filled their little bubble. "Okay, okay, I forgive you. But just so you know, you have a new nickname in my head: Deku 'Tactical Hands' Midoriya."
"Oh, no."
"Oh, yes. But don't worry," she added, her expression softening. "We won. And it was thanks to that crazy science of yours. Thanks for trusting me."
"I'll always trust you," Izuku said with a sincerity that made her blush again. "You're the best partner a perverted scientist could ask for."
"Hey!"
"I mean, a brilliant scientist! Brilliant!" he corrected himself, waving his hands frantically.
They finished their dinner amidst laughter, the camaraderie between them stronger and more comfortable than ever. The tension of the battle and the embarrassment of the plan had dissolved, leaving only the solid foundation of mutual trust. When they said goodbye on the street, the sun was setting, painting the Musutafu sky in intense oranges and purples that cast long, jagged shadows on the asphalt.
Izuku walked down the bustling street with a spring in his step. The conversation with Ochako had left him in high spirits. He felt like a true hero-in-training, with a partner, a secret power, and a bright future. But his current mission was more personal.
He stopped in front of a small flower shop, the sweet scent of blossoms spilling onto the sidewalk.
"Okay, mission 'Maintain Maternal Morale' is a go," he thought, his internal monologue bubbling with an enthusiasm that was purely his own. "Mom's going to love this. She's been glowing lately. New clothes, new confidence, she's even trying protein shake recipes that don't taste like grass! I've got to keep that fire burning!"
He entered the shop. A kind elderly woman greeted him from behind the counter.
"I'm looking for something... bright," Izuku said, his usual shyness peeking through his newfound confidence.
"Bright, you say?" the old woman smiled. "For a special girl?"
"For the most special one of all. My mother."
His eyes landed on a bouquet of sunflowers, their yellow petals so vibrant they looked like they had trapped sunlight itself.
"These," he said with certainty. "They're perfect. They're bright, like her smile, right?"
The old woman nodded knowingly. "An excellent choice, young man."
With the carefully wrapped bouquet under one arm, he made his next stop at the pharmacy next door. He navigated the cosmetics aisles with a focus he usually reserved for analyzing Quirks. Finally, he found what he was looking for: a high-quality skin cream, the kind his mother would never buy for herself. The pharmacy's fluorescent lights gleamed on the elegant silver packaging.
"This will help with elasticity," he thought, recalling a footnote in one of the manuals he'd read online about physical training after significant weight loss. "Small details. The details matter."
He left the pharmacy, bouquet in one hand and the small bag in the other. The street vibrated with the energy of people heading home from work, their chatter and laughter a pleasant hum. To take a shortcut, he turned into an alley he often used, a direct route that saved him a couple of minutes. The shadows stretched long to greet him, and the bustle of the main street faded behind him.
The alley was a tunnel of brick and darkness, punctuated by the intermittent flicker of a lone streetlamp. The air smelled of damp trash and rusted metal. Izuku walked confidently, lost in thought about the smile he would bring to his mother's face. He didn't hear the silent footsteps that dropped from the edge of a dumpster behind him.
A laugh, a sharp, musically unhinged sound, cut through the air. "Such a pretty boy with flowers, huh?"
Izuku spun around. A girl, not much older than him, stood a few feet away, blocking the alley's exit. She had messy blonde hair tied up in two chaotic buns and a manic smile stretched across her face. In her hand, a knife glinted faintly in the flickering light.
"I bet your blood smells just as sweet as those flowers," she said, tilting her head, her yellow eyes glowing with a strange mix of glee and hunger.
"Who... what are you doing?" Izuku stammered, instinctively taking a step back.
"Oh, just a little greeting!" she chirped, and lunged forward.
There was no warning. She moved with an unnatural, explosive speed. The knife carved a whistling arc through the air. Izuku's instincts, honed by years of dodging Bakugo and months of intense training, took over. He ducked just as the knife passed an inch from his ear.
"I don't want to fight you!" he shouted, trying to keep his distance in the narrow alley.
"Fight?" she laughed again, the sound chilling as it bounced off the brick walls. "Oh, I don't want to fight! I just want a taste! Just a little one!"
She lunged again with a series of fast, erratic slashes. Izuku dodged, weaved, and backpedaled. His new sneakers slipped on a puddle of dirty water. The bouquet of sunflowers fell from his hand, the yellow petals scattering across the filthy concrete like a trail of dying sunlight.
As he dodged another cut aimed at his side, his gaze, out of sheer habit, flickered to her chest.
"Oh, no!" he thought in a panic. "Small chest! Small heart! Bad sign! Very, very bad sign! My theory...!"
His glance lasted barely a fraction of a second, but she caught it. Her manic smile widened, and a dark blush colored her cheeks.
"Looking, are we?" she hissed, her voice a dangerous purr. "Such a naughty boy! That'll cost you an extra lick!"
The fight was a chaotic, desperate dance in the confined space. The girl, Toga, was relentless, her movements unpredictable, a mix of acrobatic grace and raw violence. Izuku could only dodge, using the dumpsters as makeshift shields.
"Stay back!" he panted, blocking a slash with his forearm as his uniform sleeve tore.
"But we're having so much fun!" she said, her eyes shining with excitement.
On her next lunge, Izuku took a false step backward. His heel hit something small and metallic on the ground—an abandoned soda can. He lost his balance, his arms flailing. Toga, thrown forward by her own momentum, couldn't stop.
She crashed into him, and they both hit the ground in a tangle of limbs. The fall was clumsy, chaotic, and ended in the most humiliating and dangerous position imaginable. He landed on his back, his head hitting a trash bag that luckily cushioned the blow. She fell on top of him, her momentum making her stumble again, and her thighs and rear landed squarely on Izuku's face, plunging him into darkness and the scent of her cheap, sweet perfume.
"Eek!" Toga yelped, a surprisingly high-pitched and feminine sound. "T-that's not where you're supposed to be!"
Her head hit the side of a dumpster with a dull thud, leaving her momentarily stunned.
"Mmph! G'off-me!" Izuku protested, his voice muffled by the fabric of her skirt.
The smell of rotten garbage and damp metal mixed with her strawberry scent, creating a completely disorienting sensory cocktail. His hands, out of pure survival instinct, clamped onto her thighs, pushing against the firm, surprisingly strong muscle to try and free himself. His face burned from the contact, the humiliation, and the lack of air.
"I'm not... trying... to enjoy this!" he managed to gasp.
Toga recovered from the blow to her head, shaking it clear. She looked down at their situation. Her dazed expression slowly transformed into one of predatory, perverse joy.
"Mmmm, I don't know about that..." she purred, shifting slightly. "You're cute when you squirm!"
Her eyes fell on the knife, which had landed a few inches from her hand. She saw it glint in the streetlamp's light.
"Now, hold still," she whispered. "This will only hurt a little."
She began to reach for the knife.
Panic seized Izuku. He was pinned. She was going for the knife. He was going to die in a stinking alley, suffocated by a psycho schoolgirl's butt. No. This was not how he was going to end.
With a cry of pure desperation, he gathered all his strength and used his hands to do the only thing he could: push. He gripped her backside firmly, applying all the pressure he could to get her off him.
And in that instant of total, desperate, adrenaline-fueled contact, his Quirk activated.
It wasn't a trickle. It wasn't a flow. It was a detonation. An overload of information so violent and strange that his brain almost shut down. It wasn't clean, orderly data like with Momo. It was a chaotic torrent of instinct, hunger, and a strange sadness. He saw flashes of blood, felt a thirst that wasn't his, a need to transform, to become...
He was stunned, his push faltering, his mind reeling from the shock of the cryptic information flooding him.
Toga, feeling his grip loosen, seized the moment. She lunged for the knife, her fingers brushing the hilt. She was about to stab him.
"Wait, wait!" Izuku yelled, the words tumbling out of his mouth before he could think, a desperate gamble based on a split-second vision he didn't understand. "I know how to cure your blood addiction!"
Toga froze. Her hand stopped, the knife millimeters from its target. Her entire body went rigid. Slowly, she turned to look down at him, her yellow eyes wide. Her manic smile was gone. Her predatory expression had vanished. In its place was a raw, trembling vulnerability that Izuku would never have expected to see.
"What..." her voice trembled, losing all of its playful tone, "...what did you just say?"
Izuku, panting, his heart hammering like a war drum, looked up at her from the ground, still partially trapped beneath her.
"I... I saw something," he stammered, the strange information still reverberating in his skull. "Your Quirk... your need... I think I can help you! For real!"
The tip of the knife trembled. Toga's mask of insanity cracked, revealing the scared girl underneath.
"You're lying..." she whispered, her voice barely a breath in the dark alley. "Right?"
The question hung between them, sharper and more dangerous than the knife she held. The alley fell into a tense silence, heavy with possibilities.