A/N: For those who were asking, the anime is The Rising of the Shield Hero ;)


10. Tutoring

When Marinette entered the bakery to help Adrien complete the handfuls upon handfuls of special orders, he could tell she was on a mission. He really liked the strong set of her posture and determined glint in her eye whenever she got that way, which meant he'd have trouble ignoring that distraction and keeping on top of the schedule.

"So," she began, turning her fiery look towards him. "I think I've made a decision."

Adrien raised a brow. "What?"

"About the fashion world."

"You have my attention." After all, she'd been researching non-stop for over a month, now. He'd seen how much it was wearing on her. At the moment, she looked revitalized.

"I need you to be my own private tutor for a moment."

Adrien couldn't help but grin like a cat that got the cream. He sauntered up to her, striking his best pose. "Oh? Just what am I gonna be teaching you, milady? And is this really the place for it?"

Marinette's expression fell flatter than a crepe. "Adrien."

"Hint taken," he said, straightening himself up. "What am I teaching you?"

"I want every story you have to tell," she said. "You may not have been a designer, but you first hand witnessed your father's fashion empire and were involved in several different sides of it. I want to know your own personal experience with everything. Good, bad, ugly, right, wrong; I want to know."

His mouth set in a hard line. "I… I wouldn't mind it," he said, rubbing the back of his neck. "But fair warning: I'm biased."

"That's what I want to know, too," she said. "The fashion industry is extremely competitive. And from the data I've seen, there's plenty of people who go in with high hopes, only to get chewed up and spit out. What are your dark secrets? What am I actually looking forward to if I go in?"

Adrien frowned. He had plenty of stories to tell, that wasn't the issue. What was the problem was the likelihood they'd discourage her from pursuing fashion any further. And if she did end up wanting to go into fashion, he didn't want to crush any hope she currently held.

But looking at her now, he realized he wouldn't be able to tell her no. She had a determination in her eyes that was both sexy and frightening. That look warned that she was on the verge of a decision, and whatever she chose would be ultimate and final.

Part of him loved that fire in her, and part of him wished he had half the gumption she did.

"Okay," he relented. "But before I do, can you promise me that you're not basing everything off what I say? That it will only add to all the other research you've done."

She nodded resolutely. "Promise."

He sighed. "Well," he said, giving her a sheepish smile. "Guess the question now is where do I even begin?"


11. Truth or Dare

Marinette had come to her decision, and no one would sway her from it.

The tales Adrien had told her were mostly along the lines of what she expected, while there were others that more strongly leaned towards "that's pretty good," and still others that crossed into "that's really bad" territory.

So, after that evening, the question she had faced herself with was not "could I handle this?" but rather "do I want to do this?" and "do all the potential benefits out way all the negative?"

But really, that brought her back to "what do I even want out of life?" because her answer changed everything…

Which make her realize that maybe she wasn't so resolute in her decision after all.

She was almost nineteen. By now, most of her classmates had plans for the future they were all pursuing. She had thought she'd had plans, but when they all crumbled beneath her feet, she found herself lost, wondering around the Land of What-Do-I-Do-Now?

"Marinette!"

With a squeak, she practically leapt five feet into the air at the sudden voice right beside her. When she realized it was Adrien, she leaned against the bakery table with a heavy sigh. "You nearly gave me a heart attack!"

"Someone was lost in thought."

"Yeah! And the last thing you do when someone is lost in thought is purposefully surprise them by suddenly appearing right beside them. Jerk!" With a hint of a smile, she took some of the flour on the table and flicked it at him, knowing that if she did, he'd wipe that apologetic look of his face and loosen up a bit.

"Hey!" He turned away, but not quick enough. Flour dusted his perfect jawbone and perfect collar bone and perfectly fitted t-shirt. But it was the perfect smile that he wore that made the rest of the heaviness she felt on her shoulders disappear, even if only for a moment.

"Don't do that again," she warned, her voice not really holding any bite in it.

"No promises," he said with a chuckle, dusting the flour off him. "That was a pretty cute squeak, princess."

She just sighed. There was no getting him off the name by now so she'd just learned to roll with it. "I am not cute! I am fierce."

"Yeah, like a little fluffy Papillion."

She gasped, flicking even more flour at him. He laughed again.

"Is the bread in the oven yet, Marinette?" her father called out, bringing her back to reality.

"Almost!" she cried, quickly hurrying to score the tops of the loaves on the last pan before hurriedly sticking all the pans she'd made in the oven. "Done!"

"Thank you." That was when her papa reappeared. "The fridge is clean now, so I'm off."

"And I'm on," Adrien said with a grin. "There's only a couple special orders to handle tonight, right?"

"Yup. You'll finish those in a flash."

Adrien beamed. "Perfect. Got to love when my days are easy."

Her papa chuckled. "Can't disagree with you there. Being a baker is more fun when you don't have too large an order burden."

"Exactly," Adrien agreed, already tying on his apron.

After Marinette saw her papa off, leaving just her and Adrien in the kitchen, he sidled up to her. "Let's play a game."

She quirked a brow at him. He looked way too mischievous at the moment. "You just got on shift, and you want to play a game?"

He was positively beaming. "Yup."

Although she shook her head, she didn't mind it. She enjoyed running shifts with Adrien or just hanging out with him in general. But she knew that if they started up, she was the one who'd have to keep them on track for the night. "Start in on something first. Unless you wanna be here all night."

"Point taken." Immediately, Adrien set to work weighing ingredients and then mixing up a dough.

"So," he said as he worked. "Truth or dare."

Marinette dropped the bench scraper in her hand, less out of shock and more out of annoyance, as she shot him an incredulous look. "Are you kidding me?"

"No."

"You want to play truth or dare? Now?"

"Yup. Just for a couple rounds."

Little red flags went up in Marinette's mind as she studied the overly happy blond. "Why?"

"Because I want to. Now! Truth or dare?"

She should shut this down before they got into trouble, but she had the feeling he'd tease her for it if she did. And she was not going to give him the chance. "Which one do you want me to pick?"

Adrien turned to study her a moment. "Dare."

"Truth, then," she countered with a grin.

"Yes!" He pumped his fist in the air. "I was banking on that."

This time, she almost did drop the bench scraper out of shock. "What?"

"I know you," he twittered, grinning like the idiot he was. "I know you. You weren't going to give me the satisfaction of picking what I wanted; you never do. So, I just played you like the cheap fiddle you are."

Marinette tried to look offended. She really did. But it was hard when her cute, idiot coworker was doing a happy dance. That, and she rather enjoyed this banter they always had. "Excuse you, who are you calling a cheap fiddle?"

"You, princess."

"Oh really? The kazoo is calling me a cheap fiddle."

"Kazoo?"

"Kazoo."

He pantomimed being stabbed through the heart, and while he tried to keep the smile off his face, she could tell he was struggling. "Ahh, the ice princess is so cold. The light is fading. Limbs. Growing. Cold."

She failed suppressing a laugh, turning and hiding her growing grin behind her hand. He was such a dork.

Adrien seemed to pull himself together, laughing along with her as he went back to measuring more ingredients. "Okay, okay. Back to the topic at hand."

Marinette calmed herself, but her smile refused to budge. "Okay, you were asking me truth."

Adrien came to stand right across from her. He reached across the table, grabbing her hands and pulling them closer. Her smile was gone now, and so was Adrien's, as their combined hands rested in the middle of the table. "Scale of one to ten, how much do you trust me?"

Her cheeks and neck and chest flushed red as she stared into his green eyes. "W… what brought that on?"

His grasp on her hands tightened. "I just want to know."

That was a lie. Or, at least only a half truth. He had a different reason for asking that specific question. She knew it. She could tell. Eight months of working together, and she'd come to be able to read this man like a book.

When had they gotten so close?

She took a breath to clear her mind. She'd probe him later, or maybe their little game would give her the answer she was looking for in that regard. But for now, she quietly responded, "A solid 8.5."

Adrien paused, taking in those words before slowly nodding. "8.5," he murmured. "I'll take it."

With that, he pulled his hands away. Marinette felt the loss immediately, but there wasn't anything she was willing to do to make them come back. Not yet, anyway.

And would her heart calm down already? The way it was racing made it hard to think.

"Truth or dare?" she asked, voice quiet.

"Truth," he answered.

"How many secrets would you say you're hiding from me right now?"

A loaded question, Marinette knew. But she just had a feeling, an inkling, that she knew the exact number. One for what he was hiding now, and one… if he had feelings for her.

It wasn't the first time that thought had popped into her mind. She'd had her suspicions for a while now that his flirty banter wasn't just out of good, playful fun. And maybe she was reading into it too much, but she felt like he'd been more… touchy with her lately. A fist pound here, a pat on the shoulder here, a playfully light punch to the arm in the heat of their teasing; things like that. And if not touching, then he seemed to like being close. And and and…

And was she wrong, or did when he ask her 'truth', he purposefully make it that intimate?

Do you like me, Adrien? Or am I jumping to a conclusion?

And to I like you in return? Or am I mistaking our friendship for something more?

Because I don't want to hurt you. And I don't want to get hurt by you.

But…

It might be too late for that.

"Like…" Adrien began after a moment's pause. "Define secret."

"Something that you do not, in the near future, intend to tell me or would be comfortable in telling me."

Adrien pursed his lips. "How will you know I'm being honest about the number?"

"I trust you 8.5 out of ten, right?" she softly reminded. "A number that can go up or down at any time."

That got Adrien to wince. "Yeah," he murmured.

There was a long pause, one Marinette wasn't sure he was going to break.

"How far is 'near future'?" he finally asked.

"Does it matter?"

"Yeah, it does."

She paused. "Then answer how many secrets are on the line here."

"Only one."

"Only one?"

"Something I am not comfortable telling you or don't intend to tell you in the near future, per your words, yes. Only one."

Her brows knit together. Only one? Which meant… either the thing he was hiding now or the feelings. It was one or the other, but not both. "So…" she said, trying to hide her disappointment. "Are you saying that you intend to tell me this sometime in the future? But don't know when in the future that will be?"

His brow knit together nervously, before he played it off with a warbly smile. "I'm pretty sure I answered my truth, already, princess."

She frowned. Technically, he did, in an odd, roundabout way that somehow left her with more questions than answers. "Fine. How about we just drop this already?"

Part of her didn't want to drop it. Part of her wanted to be able to pull another truth out of him. She wanted… needed to know which secret he was hiding. But she wasn't sure her heart could handle it if it wasn't the secret she wanted it to be.

"One more round," he quickly begged.

Marinette quirked a brow but surrendered without fuss. "Fine. Dare. What are you gonna make me do now?"

He grinned. "I was hoping for that."

"Why?"

He stopped the mixer, then came over to her and once again leaned in close. "I dare you… to come to New York with me."

Marinette was frozen. She blinked her eyes several times, and her tongue felt glued to the roof of her mouth.

Eventually, she found the words to say. "I'm sorry, repeat that?"


12. Seatmates

It had been a month since Adrien had gotten the pleasure of surprising Marinette with a trip to New York.

After Marinette had asked him for his stories of the fashion world, Adrien had been so worried that she'd walked away with the determination to surrender her former dreams, and that made him feel too guilty to handle. So, breaking the unspoken vote of confidence she'd placed in him, he'd talked to her parents.

He hadn't divulged everything, just the bare essentials necessary to get them to understand. Mr. Dupain had seemed surprised, but the information didn't seem to have caught Mrs. Cheng off guard. It made more sense when she admitted she'd been suspecting something was up for a while, and this had confirmed it.

So Adrien had told them what he wanted to do: give Marinette's dreams one last encouraging push by taking her to fashion week. His original plan had been for it to be Paris' fashion week, but he'd been keeping tabs on Chloe and her whereabouts as well as taking into account that Marinette had been barred from several Parisian schools. If she wanted school to be a reality, she wouldn't be in Paris, meaning it might be beneficial to take her outside the country. It would give her the chance her to explore and stretch her wings in a way staying inside France would not allow.

With her parents' blessings on the idea, Adrien had started planning. And then had come the fun part of surprising her with it.

The roller-coaster of emotions she'd gone on after his dare had been a joy to watch. Disbelief to doubt to shock to excitement. She'd been so expressive that Adrien had found himself falling even harder. And when she'd agreed to let him take her to New York—which took no small amount of convincing—he'd been over the moon.

However, there was one thing about that day he couldn't forget. Mostly because it hung of his head. Marinette had only remembered by the end of her shift that she still had one last round of truth or dare.

"Dare," he'd answered. It was only fair.

She'd seemed relieved almost at that. And with her words, he understood why. "I dare you to let me save my dare for another time."

After recalling the way she'd tortured him by cashing in her last favor by making him clean out the deep, dark crannies of the freezer and storage room, he had been hesitant about this one. Even if she had repaid him for that torture with the best dinner he'd eaten in months, he still couldn't forget the devious sparkles in her eyes as she cashed in that favor. It made him worried for just what kind of dare she would make him do.

Hopefully it wouldn't be too bad. After all, he was taking her to New York. She wouldn't be cruel, would she?

Quietly, he scoffed. No, this was Marinette. She could be downright devious if she wanted to and make him think he was okay with it.

A weight on his shoulder called him out of his reverie. They'd been watching a new anime he'd downloaded on his computer for the plane ride. When they started, Marinette had seemed intent on watching it, but at the moment, it seemed his seatmate was too tired to keep it up.

"Hey," he whispered, gently shaking his shoulder.

She took an earbud out but didn't look up. "Hmm?"

"Do you want to just watch this later and sleep now?"

"Mm-hmm."

"Okay." He paused the anime, then shut his computer screen.

Marinette shifted just enough to take out her earbuds, but then she was back to leaning against his shoulder. "This okay?" she asked, her groggy voice barely above a whisper.

"It's fine," he assured even though his heart protested. It was a little too okay with him. "Get some sleep."

With one last hum, Marinette fully settled against his side, and within a little while, she was out.

Adrien sighed, leaning his head against Marinette's.

"Truth or dare?" she asked, voice quiet.

"Truth," he answered, going back to the mixer to turn it off.

"How many secrets would you say you're hiding from me right now?"

He let his eyes drift closed at the memory. If only he had the courage to go for it. But this was the girl he considered to be his closest friend, and he wasn't ready to take that plunge quite yet.

I really like you.

If she didn't feel the same, he was sure they could go back to almost normal in time, but there'd always be that rift.

A small, bitter smile suddenly crossed his lips. Here he was, trying to encourage her to follow her dreams or at least press forward to take a chance, and he was too much a coward to take his own advice.

What a hypocrite.